Last
Hurrah of Nixon's 'New Majority'?
by
Patrick
J. Buchanan
Recently
by Patrick J. Buchanan: A
Grand Old Party in Panic
Looking back
all the way to America's Civil War, there have been three dominant
presidential coalitions.
The first
was Abraham Lincoln's. With his war to restore the Union and his
martyrdom, Lincoln inaugurated an era of Republican dominance that
lasted more than seven decades and saw only two Democratic presidents:
Grover Cleveland and Woodrow Wilson.
The second
coalition was FDR's, where he and his vice president Harry Truman
won five consecutive presidential elections. Only Gen. Eisenhower
could break that streak.
The third
was Richard Nixon's New Majority, cobbled together after his narrow
1968 victory, where he annexed the Northern Catholic ethnics and
Southern Christian conservatives of FDR's coalition to win 49 states
in 1972. Ronald Reagan would follow up with 44- and 49-state landslides
and see his vice president win 40 states in 1988.
That New Majority
is now history. In the five elections since 1992, Republicans have
won the popular vote once – in 2004. And while Mitt Romney is slightly
ahead in polls today, reaching 270 electoral votes will be no easy
task. The electoral map is becoming problematic.
According
to GOP Chairman Reince Priebus, the party has a 3-2-1 strategy.
While holding all the states McCain won, the party must first recapture
three red states that Barack Obama carried: Indiana, North Carolina
and Virginia. Next, Romney must carry the two major battleground
states that Obama won last time: Ohio and Florida. Third, add one
more state Obama carried in 2008, like Colorado. Then the GOP is
home.
Yet with the
exception of Indiana, none of those six states seems close to secure.
And the GOP must win them all. And now Missouri, after Todd Akin's
"legitimate rape" gaffe, has moved from Republican red into the
undecided column.
The good news:
With Paul Ryan on the ticket, Wisconsin is in play, and Mitt's birth
state, Michigan, is getting a second look.
Yet consider
the uphill struggle the GOP faces in a year when the election should
be a cakewalk.
Though he
has four straight trillion-dollar deficits and 42 months of 8 percent
unemployment to his credit, Obama appears to already have four of
the seven mega-states – California, Illinois, Pennsylvania and New
York – secure and is more than competitive in Ohio and Florida.
Looking to
the future, what is the Republican strategy ever again to win New
York, Pennsylvania, Illinois or California, other than due to some
national calamity or new depression?
Where the Democratic
base seems secure, the GOP base, the South from the Potomac to the
Pedernales, is seeing Democratic encroachments – in Florida, Virginia
and North Carolina.
Moreover,
while the Nixon-Reagan coalition was united on the mega-issues of
morality and patriotism, today's GOP is fragmenting on everything
except the imperative of removing Obama.
One hears
scarcely a peep of protest at Obama's withdrawal from Iraq and Afghanistan.
Yet U.S. influence is sinking in Baghdad as a new civil war is stirring,
and the Taliban's return after the U.S. departure from Afghanistan
seems a certainty. Where have all the uber-hawks gone?
The caws of
Sen. John McCain and the neoconservatives for intervention in Syria
and an ultimatum to Tehran to halt the enrichment of uranium or
face a U.S. attack is echoed by some evangelicals. But foreign policy
"realists," libertarians and the anti-interventionist right, all
of whom are urging us to stay out of any new war, seem more in tune
with the times – and the country.
The GOP used
to be united on a traditionalist view of social and moral issues.
Now, not only the Log Cabin Club, but libertarians and some moderate
Republicans are receptive to the idea of homosexual marriage. And
the ticket of Romney-Ryan accepts abortion in the case of incest
or rape.
Once the principled
position is yielded, where do we draw the line? At what point does
constant accommodation cause True Believers to depart?
Priebus said
on MSNBC's "Morning Joe" that Republicans will cut federal spending
from 25 percent of gross domestic product, roughly where it is today,
to 20 percent. But a cut of 5 percent of GDP translates into a budget
reduction of $750 billion.
That is one-fifth
of the entire U.S. budget.
While the
Republicans would seek to achieve such a reduction over a period
of years, such budget butchery is unheard of in modern times.
Where are
the cuts to come from?
Social
Security and Medicare are the largest social programs. But the beneficiaries
of those middle-class entitlements are seniors and retirees, the
big divisions of the Republican army. And Mitt has assured these
folks he is not going to cut Medicare.
As for defense,
Mitt says we need to spend more. And though the Rand Paul wing of
the party is open to cuts in military spending, and some conservatives
are ready to see bases closed abroad, this would cause a revolt
among congressional hawks, neoconservatives, and executives and
lobbyists of the military-industrial complex who show up at all
those Washington fundraisers.
Mitt Romney
and the Republicans have a shot at taking it all this year. But
beyond, one sees only darkening skies for the Grand Old Party.
August
29, 2012
Patrick
J. Buchanan [send
him mail] is co-founder and editor of The
American Conservative. He is also the author of seven books,
including Where
the Right Went Wrong, and Churchill,
Hitler, and the Unnecessary War. His latest book is Suicide
of a Superpower: Will America Survive to 2025? See his
website.
Copyright
© 2012 Creators Syndicate
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