Online Trolls Call Themselves Experts, but None Match my Expertise in Genocide
Pete Hegseth Says Military Intercepted Six Vessels Trying to Break Blockade
Senate Judiciary Committee Advances Bipartisan Bill Banning AI Chatbots for Minors
Here's How Many People Stopped Receiving SNAP Benefits So Far
The Left's Attacks on Homeschooling Rear Their Ugly Head Again
Seattle Leftists Seek to Sacrifice Children for Their Own Peace and Quiet
A 77-Year-Old Was Beaten in Seattle. The Mayor's Response Is Infuriating.
The Hill Pushes Laughable Poll on President Trump's Fitness to Serve
Smith College Faces Title IX Investigation for Admitting Trans Women
Here's an Update on Operation Epic Fury and Project Freedom
Randi Weingarten Isn't Worried About Falling Math or Reading Scores. Here's What She's...
The Guy Who Vetoed Antisemitism Legislation Wants Us to Know He's Deeply Offended...
The First Voice a Child Hears
Iran Launches Another Strike Against the United Arab Emirates
Nick Shirley Says He 'Was Almost Taken Hostage in Cuba'
OPINION

The Duty of the Opposition Party is to Oppose

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.
The Duty of the Opposition Party is to Oppose

The baleful events of November 4th have unleashed a torrent of howling, recrimination and demonstrative public soul searching as the politicos, pundits, and public attempt to determine the future of the defeated, and presumably chastened, Republican Party. Spokespersons for the various interest groups and movements are busy charting new courses that will transform the GOP into variously, the Junior Democrats of the 1970s, a sort of European technocratic-managerial Party based on the British model, a social issue-averse libertarian clique, or a combination of all three, and probably more. The Republican search for a coherent identity, as the clear minority is indeed necessary and proper, since the Party numbers are worse than they have been at any time since the late 1970s.

Advertisement

In the process of sifting through the wreckage and beginning a salvage operation the Republican Party would be well advised to harken back to its past for a historical precedent. In 1938 the citizens of Ohio sent Robert Taft, a noted attorney and son of ex-President and ex-Supreme Court Chief Justice William Howard Taft to represent the Buckeye State in the U.S. Senate. Taft quickly established himself as a conservative leader and eloquent critic of the New Deal and the welfare state. The Republican Party, then as now, was at low ebb and searching for a coherent national identity. Senator Taft offered a course when he stated, “The duty of the opposition Party is to oppose…” In practice this developed into an anti-New Deal coalition of Republicans and conservative Democrats who were growing increasingly uneasy with the statist thrust of Roosevelt’s policies.

Today’s Republican Party should remember and emulate Taft’s example. The country is better served by a vigorous public debate between the agencies vying for power than by a dominant organ setting the national agenda while the defeated group hurries to jump aboard the bandwagon. The Republican Party will also find its character in the process of redefining its role in the new political landscape of 2009 and beyond.

The major practical difficulty inherent in such a strategy would be in translating Taft’s dictum into a workable policy. The Republicans must guard against the temptation to sink into mere obstructionism and negativity. They must organize and present a principled opposition to Obama’s neo-Social Democracy by offering clearly defined conservative, market based alternatives. It is critically important that the Party reinvigorate its relationship with the conservative think tanks so that it can again become a party of ideas and not simple politics.

Advertisement

The second phase of this Republican renewal plan is arguably more important than the first. The Party must design and implement an effective media strategy, in order to trumpet the new message. Recent history teaches us that largely correct policy fails in the marketplace of ideas when employed by ministers who cannot articulate goals, values, and grand strategy. This new Republican offensive must relentlessly characterize the ideas behind the rhetoric. They must concentrate on the oft-maligned “mainstream media”, that is the Broadcast and Cable networks, along with the important daily newspapers and the major weekly news magazines. Certainly, a Republican project must also target the alternative media like talk radio, the opinion e- journals, and the weblogs. Finally, the Party should take a page from the Clinton playbook and issue an avalanche of e-mail messages and FAXES, on a daily basis if necessary, to keep the public informed and poised for the next step in the continuing offensive.

Therein lies a potential Republican political strategy. What are the chances that this strategy could succeed? In the current climate, with the Republican Party teeming with accommodationists and opportunists, not to mention the RINOS (Republicans In Name Only) the chance that an avowedly conservative opposition strategy would succeed is a questionable proposition. Still, the conservative opposition led by the likes of John Shadegg, Mike Pence, and Eric Cantor might just make this work. If they do they can thank Robert Taft and his famous epigram that “The duty of the opposition Party is to oppose…” for a roadmap and a historical precedent.

Advertisement

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement