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The sundered GOP: Is it all Bush’s fault?

posted at 12:45 pm on February 6, 2008 by Bryan
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I’ll say at the outset that my intent here isn’t to bash Bush or to ignore the good things he has done, particularly on the Supreme Court. My intent is to get a handle on what’s gone wrong so that it might be fixed.

There’s a striking similarity between the Bush 43 and Clinton 42 presidencies: Both left their parties weaker than they were when they won the presidency. Clinton inherited a Democrat party that dominated governorships, legislatures and Congress, but when he left, the Republicans dominated state and national politics across the board. Likewise, Bush inherited that strong GOP but as he leaves, the Democrats own Congress and dominate in the states. Some of this is undoubtedly cyclical; voters just get tired of a party and vote them out after a while. There is one crucial difference, though, between the Bush and Clinton exits and that’s where the parties find themselves as political forces. The Democrats after Clinton haven’t been any more divided than their collection of interest groups usually is, but the Republicans after Bush are almost in a state of civil war and on the cusp of nominating a presidential contender who is unacceptable to much of the party’s base.

It may be President Bush’s fault, almost by himself, that the Republicans find ourselves in the shape we’re in: A front-runner who isn’t winning in the South, a second-place candidate who doesn’t win hotly contested primaries, and a third candidate who’s a social con populist Know-Nothing on foreign policy who can only win in the South. Here are a few reasons why.

1. Iraq. Bush allowed the 2003 victory to become the 2003-2007 quagmire, robbing the GOP of its national security advantage. He didn’t allow it to happen intentionally, of course, but did let events get away from him for far too long. Additionally, when attacked by Ted Kennedy et al from the “Bush LIED” angle, the Bush administration failed to fight back. That handed the middle ground to his critics, moving the entire country to the left and therefore against the war, which also hurt the GOP’s national security advantage. It has also demoralized conservatives who support the war but have come to view Bush as weak in making his case to continue it. I am certainly in that category, and if asked by a pollster would say that I disapprove of the way Bush is handling the war. That’s not because I oppose the war; I don’t. I support it strongly. I support the surge. I just don’t think the administration is handling the domestic side of the fight very well at all. That speaks directly of President Bush’s leadership and priorities.

2. Cheney. Dick Cheney has been a fine vice president in my opinion, but his age and health concerns made him an instant non-starter to succeed Bush. With no heir apparent, the party’s various factions have put forward their own candidates: McCain for national security conservatives, Huckabee for social conservatives, and Romney or Paul for economic conservatives. Paul’s attacks on the Iraq war from within the party haven’t helped, but probably haven’t contributed much to the split either. But the fact that McCain has a long history of supporting positions that are anathema to most conservatives, the fact that Huckabee is really a populist on economics and that Romney’s unique history and perceived slickness made him distrusted by a large segment of the party mean that this year’s race was destined to be contentious. Romney has tried to make the sale that he’s the only full-spectrum conservative in the race, but hasn’t closed the deal. The lack of a viable vice president to run behind Bush made the current split inevitable. It may also have contributed to Bush’s lack of self-defense on the war: With no candidate to follow him that could be seen as running on Bush’s legacy, he may not have seen a strong enough reason to mount a continuous defense of his policies. Cheney was, of course, Bush’s choice.

3. Immigration. Illegal immigration is one among many issues upon which the Republican coalition can split, mainly along the fault lines between economic conservatives and security conservatives. The former favor more or less open borders as a supply of cheap labor, while the latter see the porous borders as serious security threats. President Bush announced in early 2004 that if re-elected, he would pursue “comprehensive immigration reform.” That was seen, rightly, as code for amnesty for millions of illegal aliens and as having little or no real positive impact on border security. Previous amnesties followed that pattern, and led to more illegal immigration and less security. The base of the party didn’t like Bush’s plan and let him know that in no uncertain terms, but voted him back into office largely because of the war and because he wasn’t John Kerry. Second term Bush not only did not back down on “comprehensive immigration reform,” he tried to push it through Congress. Twice. In the teeth of fierce conservative opposition, both times. And he and his surrogates called his opponents within his own party “nativists” and the like, when all along border security has been primarily a national security issue. After 9-11, it took on new significance, but Bush et al evidently never saw that significance. The nature of the reform itself plus the way Bush, McCain et al dealt with their own fellow Republicans in opposition created a split that has yet to heal and isn’t likely to heal any time soon. Unfairly demagoguing the issue and calling opponents “racist” and the like tends to leave them bitter. Bush should have foreseen that, but didn’t, fracturing the party. More attention to the security base and less inflammatory tactics could have prevented this outcome. This has also exacerbated the tension between McCain and the base.

There are other issues that have contributed to the losses in 2006 and what looks like a loss coming this fall, but I do think these three factors come closest to explaining why the Republicans are split and bickering among ourselves. Of the three, the most easily foreseen and prevented was putting Dick Cheney on the ticket. As I said, I think Cheney has been a fine VP and I have no policy problems with him. But his presence hasn’t helped the Republicans figure out what to do after Bush.

If you’re wondering what this means for the future, McCain is probably more likely to defend the war and doesn’t carry the “Bush LIED” baggage. That’s a plus. His veep pick will be crucial not only to reconciling him with conservatives but, should he win, to forecasting the future politics of the GOP. As of yet, that’s an unknown. Unfortunately, McCain is with Bush on the immigration issue right down to the smear tactics. That’s a minus.


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Comment pages: 1 2

TX Mom on February 6, 2008 at 3:12 PM

That’s the kind of thing I’ve been trying to get at with Huckabee’s support. He’s close to Rick Warren, who all but endorsed him a while back. Warren is hugely influential. That plus the loose network connecting a lot of these mega and emergent churches may be helping spread Huck’s peculiar political gospel in a way that doesn’t show up on anyone’s radar.

It’s a theory, anyway.

Bryan on February 6, 2008 at 3:43 PM

I think Bob Bullock made GWBush look dependable in a good way as Texas Governor. Bush certainly took credit for Bullock’s work and care for Texas that paved Bush’s promenade toward the Oval Office. Subsequently, with Bullock’s passing and Bush’s promotion, the Texas Democrats skipped town and fled the state during legislative session. National Congressional Democrats are going to be much more vicious than ever, as Bush has fed them and strengthened them with his increase in spending, impeding conservative concerns regarding taxes to pay for his additional bureaucracies including all sorts of bonus benefits (to include citizenship) provided to illegal aliens.

I can not see the long term validity to conservatives giving up the ghost this election. Whenever taxes are enacted, it is nearly impossible to retract those increases. Whenever a government bureaucracy is legislated into existence, it is next to impossible to retract or to cut back anything once taken hold.

Even if McCain gets elected instead of either official Democrat, his only loyal servants are liberals. Conservatives owe McCain nothing, and are closely observed and contacted by their constituents. I do not concede that Republican Congressmen and Senators will support McCain’s liberal agenda just because of the (R). No conservative can stay home from the 2008 election because we must elect conservatives and Republicans across the board in local and federal positions.

If McCain’s record sings one praise, it aligns towards conservative domestic spending, more so than any other remaining candidate, although paying to continue the Iraq war will keep taxes high. At least remaining in Iraq would likely consist of maintaining a US military installation base rather than repeating the Vietnam experience of propping up dictators that the CIA endorses. I do not know that McCain will over-tax America in order to fit into the Democrat pocket more easily, as he would be wearing the presidential pockets. Once elected, in his mind McCain owes nothing to either Democrats or Republicans. He won, not we, but he. As far as that is concerned with McCain, maybe that’s the best we can hope for now. Support efforts to streamline Iraqi involvement, actively pursue jihadists and al Quaeda from a magnificent US-Iraqi base treaty, complete lower tax reformation, enforce current immigration laws, and establish the border security and stronger military.

My wish list.

maverick muse on February 6, 2008 at 3:54 PM

Doug on February 6, 2008 at 2:42 PM
Well said Doug.

kcd on February 6, 2008 at 4:10 PM

It is all Bush’s fault? No, but he definitely deserves a big slice of blame-pie.

Jim-Rose on February 6, 2008 at 4:26 PM

I’m sure that Bush 43 will be remembered as a great President. A measure of his greatness is that any of the possible successors to him are unquestionably lesser people. Would any truly wish for one of these candidates to have been the President during Bush’s tenure? I think not.

Viscount_Bolingbroke on February 6, 2008 at 4:35 PM

That plus the loose network connecting a lot of these mega and emergent churches may be helping spread Huck’s peculiar political gospel in a way that doesn’t show up on anyone’s radar.

You’re not seeing how broad a spectrum I’m suggesting. Obama will siphon a significant portion of the emergent church vote from the evangelical bloc.

ProdigalReflections on February 6, 2008 at 5:01 PM

On reason #3- Immigration, George Bush has taught me two very valuable lessons that I will remember for the rest of my days:

1. “Money trumps everything” – George Bush at a press conference.

2. On matters that you strongly about: to hell with the party; vote your conscience.

c3ichief on February 6, 2008 at 8:07 PM

… the war is McCain’s undeniable strength.

ProdigalReflections on February 6, 2008 at 1:35 PM

Beg to differ. I deny it, for instance.

Yes, he’s held firm for sticking to it in Iraq. But the war on terror is bigger than just Iraq, and bigger than just not surrendering. He undercut the president in multiple areas that were part of the war on terror:

1) Calling harsh interrogation techniques “torture” so he could make the case that he was above it
2) Demanding terrorists be given full Geneva convention protection as if they were enemy soldiers, rather than … terrorists (hiding in mosques, killing civilians, including their own, hiding behind women and children, etc)
3) Constant drumbeat of criticism against Rumsfeld, encouraging people to believe the problems in Iraq were a) because of Rumsfeld, and b) because no one was listening to McCain. For the record, Rumsfeld was dead right during the actual war, and McCain was wrong when he criticized that there weren’t enough soldiers. The occupation was a totally different story, but the State Department was making those decisions, which pretty much explains why Iraq was so bad for so long.

At the exact time that virtually the entire Democratic party and their media wing, aka the mainstream media, were on the attack against Bush, McCain was grandstanding to impress them.

And now McCain wants to take credit for the surge? The surge that Bush put into effect was not what McCain was asking for. McCain simply wanted more troops, and he wanted them from day one. The surge did include more troops, but not a lot more. The real difference was the change in tactics in the counterinsurgency.

Those who think McCain will be an improvement in the war on terror will be greatly disappointed.

theregoestheneighborhood on February 7, 2008 at 12:59 AM

Solid arguments for why Bush was bad for the Republican party. I agree, but only in part.

I don’t believe Iraq destroyed the Republican party, though it sure hurt Bush’s approval rating in the short term. But war is risky, this war was necessary, and Bush’s approval rating will go way up once the Iraq war is over and the BDS crazies move on to their next political enemy.

Overall, Iraq is clearly not at fault for the state of the Republican party. Proof: Not a single serious Republican candidate — which obviously excludes Ron Paul — was running from the Iraq war.

The second point is much more on target. Bush wanted a VP who was not running for election, so he could be more focused on the job to be done. This was a very good intention, and it made Cheney a very effective VP. But overall, it was a huge mistake on Bush’s part. He made a good choice for the time span of his administration, but a very bad choice for what comes after his administration.

The third point, immigration, is unquestionably a hot point in the Republican party, and one that Bush was on the wrong side of. But the only way Bush could have prevented it from hurting the Republican part is if he had managed to settle the issue by now. I don’t really know that anyone could have done that, so I wouldn’t feel right blaming Bush for it.

My own opinion of why the Republican party is in bad shape is something you actually hit on in the second point. The very reason that Bush picked a VP who was not interested in being president, is this: Bush is just not very partisan. This is to his credit as a man, but to the Republican party’s detriment now.

It’s why Bush tried so hard to be a uniter, not a divider. It’s why Bush did such a lousy job of defending his administration against the smears the opposition party kept sending his way. It’s why Bush didn’t spend a lot of time and effort trying to give the Republican party a strong leader at the end of his term.

The problem the Republican party has now is factionalism. Bush has allowed it to be fractured by not being an effective leader of the Republican party, by not giving it an effective leader to follow him, and by not preserving the Reagan coalition.

I believe history will give George W. Bush high marks, based on how good a job his administration did in foreign policy and in handling domestic problems. But the rating will be too generous, because they will overlook that he didn’t lead and preserve his party.

Yet, in spite of Bush’s faults, he’s better than every one of the Republican candidates in this upcoming election. This is a very disturbing thought….

theregoestheneighborhood on February 7, 2008 at 1:36 AM

I supported the Iraq War very strongly back in 2002. If I had known then that it would result in a McCain nomination, I’d have done something different.

flenser on February 7, 2008 at 3:11 PM

McCain would be the third term of the Bush administration in virtually every way. Probably a bit more liberal is some respects. If you think Bush has been great, back McCain. If you think he’s been poor ….

Why all these “moderate” people who hate Bush love McCain I don’t understand.

flenser on February 7, 2008 at 3:16 PM

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