There should have been a nasty, knock-down-drag-out fight within the Republican Party after the election results came in. By any reasonable measure, 2006 was a total disaster for the GOP — the party lost the House, the Senate, the majority of governors, and 11 state legislative chambers. Given the fiasco, I was kind of looking forward to the right pointing fingers, assigning blame, and basically imploding for a little while.
That never really happened. We heard isolated complaints about Karl Rove, the Rumsfeld ouster caused some grumbling, and Ken Mehlman stepped down, but the expected crack-up never came to fruition. The House GOP even kept the Boehner/Blunt leadership tandem that got the party to where it is today.
I’m pleased to report, however, that the blame game has not been completely called off. Reader D.D. alerted me to this interesting Red State post, for example.
…I think the “moderates” as typified by the Republicans featured on these websites here; The Republican Main Street Partnership, The Real Republican Majority, GOP Progress, etc. are largely to blame for the split in the Republican coalition between the so-called “moderates” and social conservatives. […]
It is remarkable to say the least to see people who claim to be Republicans and yet have such a visceral dislike of their fellow members of the Big Tent even as they preach “inclusion” and praise Reagan’s Eleventh Commandment to not speak ill of another Republican.
This doesn’t happen with Democrats. I have never seen any Blue Dog, even the most conservative among them, go on the national stage and attack any of his far more liberal Democrat colleagues as “extremists” and/or captives of the “Far Left.”
Now, anyone who thinks Democrats are suddenly the model for intraparty unity is probably a little confused, but Red State nevertheless pointed out some interesting insights from the handful of groups who want to drag the GOP, kicking and screaming if necessary, away from the right-wing cliff.
Consider some examples of not-quite-as-conservative Republican organizations. Here’s GOPProgress:
It’s the wrong strategy, being pursued and driven by all the usual suspects: social conservatives; immigration fanatics; ethically-challenged pork addicts who the former two groups are now calling “moderates” in a fatuous and cynical attempt to portray themselves as the party’s real standard bearers, which they are not (please remind me just when Barry Goldwater or Ronald Reagan proposed amending the Constitution to deal with a social concern, or when either claimed that there was simply no more fat to trim from the federal budget).
As Silver suggests in his post, too many moderate and libertarian-leaning Republicans are staying silent on this subject, instead of standing up and pointing the finger for our loss squarely where it belongs: not with the Arnold Schwarzeneggers, John McCains, Rudy Giulianis, Susan Collinses, Jim Kolbes or Mary Bonos of this world, but rather with the Tom DeLays, Rick Santorums, Marilyn Musgraves, John Kyls, Jim Inhofes and Conrad Burnses – a.k.a., the loss-makers.
And here’s the Real Republican Majority:
The pro-active extreme agenda of Senator Rick Santorum and his fellow extreme right cohorts such as Falwell and Robertson were responsible for the loss of this key Senate seat, among others.
For that matter, the Republican Main Street Partnership issued a statement saying, “Far Right Soley[sic] Responsible for Democratic Gains.”
Red State is offended by all of this, of course, and I probably would be too if I were a far-right Republican who rejected moderate factions.
But shouldn’t the handful of remaining not-quite-as-conservative Republicans have some chance to gloat here? They’ve been warning the party for a decade that the GOP is moving too far to the right to keep winning. Every year, the party’s mainstream blew them off. Now they finally have a chance to say, “We told you so.”
Regardless, this kind of infighting is probably healthy after an awful election season, so my advice to the Republican Party is simple: keep fighting with each other. There’s plenty of blame to go around, so start dishing it out. Frankly, it’s overdue.