- Oct 9, 2004
- 9,215
- 6,820
- 136
Now I know what the forum conservatives will think: oh, it's from the NYT, therefore it can't be worth reading. But please do. It's someone who's still a dyed-in-the-wool conservative presenting a cogent view on not just what happened with the Republican base, but American politics in general.
Charlie Sykes on Where the Right Went Wrong
The issue as I see it is that American politics have been turned into such a binary system that people not only believe they shouldn't cross the aisle on any issue, but that there's no aisle to cross. Not just that you can't agree with the other side, but that it will never be possible to find something to agree on, whether it's in a year from now or 50 years from now.
Both sides are guilty of this mindset to varying degrees, but for the Republicans I'd say it's been a decades long devolution to this point. It started with the rise of religious conservatism in the '70s and '80s ("only the right can be faithful!"). Then there was Bush Jr.'s time, when the right seemingly convinced itself that it had a divine right to rule forever (since only it could be tough on terrorism, right?). And when the Republicans not only lost to a Democrat, but a black Democrat with a 'foreign' name and plans to reform health care... they lost their everloving minds. It was as if they couldn't imagine that there was actually a governing model outside of a Republican-dominated system. The obstructionism on the part of Republicans during Obama's tenure was not normal or healthy, and as Sykes notes, the right seemed to ignore crackpots so long as they hated the left.
As of the end of 2016, then, we have a Republican base where outlandish ideas are entertained, and reason abandoned, simply because it's Not Democrat. I have to stress again that I see some of this on the left as well -- there are people here who froth at the mouth at the very thought of conservatives, never mind whether they're Trump apologists or reasonable conservatives who just want lower taxes and smaller government. But it seems particularly bad on the right-wing side right now, and that needs to stop if we're ever going to return to a political environment where truth matters, where sexual harassment and bigotry are campaign-ending behavior, and where compromise and intelligence are not dirty words.
Charlie Sykes on Where the Right Went Wrong
The issue as I see it is that American politics have been turned into such a binary system that people not only believe they shouldn't cross the aisle on any issue, but that there's no aisle to cross. Not just that you can't agree with the other side, but that it will never be possible to find something to agree on, whether it's in a year from now or 50 years from now.
Both sides are guilty of this mindset to varying degrees, but for the Republicans I'd say it's been a decades long devolution to this point. It started with the rise of religious conservatism in the '70s and '80s ("only the right can be faithful!"). Then there was Bush Jr.'s time, when the right seemingly convinced itself that it had a divine right to rule forever (since only it could be tough on terrorism, right?). And when the Republicans not only lost to a Democrat, but a black Democrat with a 'foreign' name and plans to reform health care... they lost their everloving minds. It was as if they couldn't imagine that there was actually a governing model outside of a Republican-dominated system. The obstructionism on the part of Republicans during Obama's tenure was not normal or healthy, and as Sykes notes, the right seemed to ignore crackpots so long as they hated the left.
As of the end of 2016, then, we have a Republican base where outlandish ideas are entertained, and reason abandoned, simply because it's Not Democrat. I have to stress again that I see some of this on the left as well -- there are people here who froth at the mouth at the very thought of conservatives, never mind whether they're Trump apologists or reasonable conservatives who just want lower taxes and smaller government. But it seems particularly bad on the right-wing side right now, and that needs to stop if we're ever going to return to a political environment where truth matters, where sexual harassment and bigotry are campaign-ending behavior, and where compromise and intelligence are not dirty words.