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Tory Lessons for Republicans

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Posted on May 3, 2010

By E.J. Dionne, Jr.

“There’s something else you need to know about me,” declared the earnest young politician, “which is I believe the test of a good and strong society is how we look after the most vulnerable, the most frail and the poorest.”

This lovely bleeding-heart liberal sentiment was part of the closing statement offered by David Cameron, the leader of Britain’s Conservative Party, at last week’s final debate before this Thursday’s election. And after a rocky campaign start, Cameron now leads in the polls and may well become the next prime minister.

Contrast Cameron’s deliberate effort to reach out to voters who, as he has put it, have “idealism and progressive ideals hard-wired into their DNA” with what’s happening in the Republican Party.

In today’s GOP, someone like Cameron would be condemned as a big-government sellout and buried under a mountain of tea bags. For even as the news in Britain focused on Cameron’s comeback, courtesy of his effort to detoxify the Conservative Party brand, the political news here was Florida Gov. Charlie Crist’s decision to abandon the Republicans and run for the U.S. Senate as an independent.

Of course there was self-interest involved. Crist would likely have lost the primary fight he just escaped to conservative Marco Rubio. But that’s also the point. Unlike the British Conservatives, our Republicans are forcing out big-tent politicians of Crist’s stripe wherever they can. When as solid a conservative as Utah’s Sen. Bob Bennett is in danger of being denied renomination, you know that the right-wing Jacobins are on the march.

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There’s also this: The angry, incendiary and sometimes racist tone that is being projected at party rallies—and by legislation such as Arizona’s Don’t-Risk-Looking-Hispanic “immigration” law—is starting to give Democrats real hope that they might avoid electoral catastrophe this fall.

No sentient Democrat expects this to be a good year. But the closer the Republican Party is to the fringe, the easier it will be for Democrats to win back middle-of-the-road voters who have strayed since President Obama’s election.

“All this hyperbole and outrage and the tea party tiger the Republicans are riding are pushing them over the edge,” Rep. Earl Blumenauer said last week. The independent-minded Oregon Democrat is not given to partisan outbursts, but he sees the extreme posturing of Republicans combined with “the insanity of what’s going on in Arizona” as having the potential of changing the year’s political trajectory.

Republicans, from my conversations, are starting to worry that a purely negative approach to this fall’s elections will be insufficient to put the party over the top. That helps explain why House Republican Leader John Boehner took to National Public Radio (and not Glenn Beck’s show) to promise that the GOP would be about more than a large number of exclamation points after the word “no.”

“We have a project under way that people will see soon,” Boehner said, “that will engage the American people in helping us develop our agenda that we would enact if we’re fortunate enough to win the majority in November.” Of course there was negative even in the positive, since he acknowledged that part of this approach will be repealing and replacing this year’s health care bill.

The Arizona madness is a good example of how Republicans are working hard to rescue the Democrats. The state’s new law, pushed by Republicans in the Legislature and signed by the state’s Republican governor, would require police to question anyone of whom there is “reasonable suspicion” that they might be an undocumented immigrant.

It is so sweeping that as staunch a conservative as Jeb Bush came out against it for raising “civil liberties issues” that are “significant.” But many in his party (including, sadly, Sen. John McCain) are supporting the measure or, as in the case of Rep. Eric Cantor, the House Republican whip, declining to take a stand.

It tells you something when politicians are forced by pressures inside their party to embrace what they must know is wrong. And as a political matter, Republicans have just given Democrats a huge boost by reminding Latinos why it’s important to vote this fall.

In Britain, Prime Minister Gordon Brown’s Labor Party is trying to hang on by insisting that Cameron’s changes to the Conservative Party are merely cosmetic. Democrats don’t have that burden. Here, moderate Republicans are being forced to plaster themselves with right-wing makeup just to survive. Or, like Charlie Christ, they’re deciding to go natural, and leave.
   
E.J. Dionne’s e-mail address is ejdionne(at)washpost.com.
   
© 2010, Washington Post Writers Group


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By copernicist, May 5, 2010 at 9:03 am Link to this comment

Yes, secretarybird is right: they ARE cosmetic, merely smeared on for the myopic. Obviously, Dionne just wants to make a point about where Republicans are headed, but using “Nice” Dave as his Model-Candidate for anything other Big Phony Award only shows how little Dionne knows about the current UK political scene. Perhaps his attention to it has been as superficial as is Cameron’s veneer of “Compassionate Conservatism”  [umm yes,??: very original indeed]....
For a more accurate view of what “CaringTory”-land would be like, here’s what Cameron’s “model” Borough has been doing already:  from today’s Independent
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/poverty-and-injustice-in-david-cameronrsquos-model-borough-1962318.html

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By tedmurphy41, May 5, 2010 at 8:34 am Link to this comment

Please do not fall for this tripe, stating that David Cameron is reaching across to the left.
It is the last thing on his mind as the Conservative Party stands for priviledge and wealth and will never change; if you have neither, you really should not vote for him but, unfortunately, the poor lambs will, and be slaughtered.
To quote from the letters page in My Guardian Newspaper: “every generation has to learn about Conservative governments the hard way”. Unfortunately, whilst they ‘learn their lesson’, everyone else has to suffer.

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By SkeeterVT, May 5, 2010 at 6:28 am Link to this comment

As a blogger, I’ve been chronicling the increasingly rightward and dangerously exclusionary treadmill that the Republican Party has been running on for the better part of two years.

What’s really sad—and at the same time frightening for anyone who believes in two-party or multi-party democracy—is the growing realization that the GOP is coming off the rails.

Below is a URL list, in chronological order, of just a few of the many articles I’ve written just in the past year about the direction the GOP has been taking. It’s not pleasant reading:

http://www.skeeterbitesreport.com/2009/02/is-it-really-new-era-for-republicans.html

http://www.skeeterbitesreport.com/2009/02/souths-dominance-of-gop-evident-in.html

http://www.skeeterbitesreport.com/2009/05/letter-from-editor-malignant-cancer-is.html

http://www.skeeterbitesreport.com/2009/09/letter-from-editor-gops-behavior-during.html

http://www.skeeterbitesreport.com/2009/11/right-wing-takeover-of-gop-solidified.html

http://www.skeeterbitesreport.com/2009/11/right-wing-chickens-come-home-to-roost.html

http://www.skeeterbitesreport.com/2009/12/letter-from-editor-palin-backs-hate.html

http://www.skeeterbitesreport.com/2010/02/knives-come-out-far-right-attacks-brown.html

http://www.skeeterbitesreport.com/2010/03/gop-caught-plotting-joe-mccarthy-style.html

http://www.skeeterbitesreport.com/2010/04/poll-confirms-tea-party-movement.html

http://www.skeeterbitesreport.com/2010/04/gop-wrote-off-blacks-with-southern.html

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By Donald Nygaard, May 4, 2010 at 9:01 pm Link to this comment

Anarcissie,

I know you don’t seek my approval but you get it anyway. Your post was both informative and reasonably circumspect in pointing out some obvious foibles of the social conservatives.

My only quibble is with your inclusion of libertarians into their midst. While some may hold similar crackpot grievances, I suspect their abhorrence of authoritarianism would yield purer solutions to our complex problem set.

Check this out! I’d be really interested to expand this discussion within the tool’s framework. BTW: I fall in the Nader–Gandhi range.

http://www.politicalcompass.org/

Cheers!

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By Larry Oberg, May 4, 2010 at 11:42 am Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)

I wouldn’t be too thrilled at Jeb Bush’s opposition to the Arizona immigration law.
It is likely that he is cynically playing to the large Cuban population in his state.
These are people who share a privileged position vis-à-vis Mexican and other
Latin American hispanics in the US. The “wet foot, dry foot” policy and past
practice grants Cubans special treatment, instant residency status if not
citizenship. This is only one of the hypocritical policy contradictions that arise from the US’s
ceaseless efforts to bring down the Cuban government. The US national policy
appears to be “love the Cubans, disdain the Mexicans.”

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By secretarybird, May 4, 2010 at 12:15 am Link to this comment

But Cameron’s changes to the Conservative party are merely cosmetic.

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Anarcissie's avatar

By Anarcissie, May 3, 2010 at 9:33 pm Link to this comment

British political categories are different from American political categories—they are much more attuned to history.  And in history, conservatives were the people who saw the community as a living organism which had to care for all its parts (although some better than others) and liberals were those who saw it as a business machine.  That’s why the Labor Party was formed—to give working-class people a voice which they weren’t going to get from the liberals.

The Republican Party in the United States has been through many transformations, but one thing it has very few of are political conservatives.  It has social conservatives (that is, racists and bigots), religious fanatics, libertarians, and business-first types, and it’s falling apart because these people have so little in common—hence the Tea Party circuses and the worship of monumental dumbness.

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