After being routed at the polls for two consecutive election cycles,
Republicans are turning introspective, asking how the party fell out of
favor so suddenly and how to correct course.
That introspection includes the inevitable catharsis that exacerbates
tensions within the existing right-center political coalition.
Conservatives say moderates were too squishy, especially on spending
matters. Moderates say conservatives were too rigid, particularly on social
issues. Libertarians say both conservatives and moderates are correct in
their diagnoses but wrong in their prescriptions.
The reality again harkens to Lord Acton's admonition about the corrupting
influence of power. Contrary to advertising messages in the recent months,
Republicans are people, too, which renders them just as susceptible to
allure of authority as their Democrat counterparts.
Sen. Tom Coburn, first elected to the House in the 1994 "Republican
revolution," observed in his book, Breech of Trust, that former Speaker Newt
Gingrich and former Majority Leader Dick Armey, vanguards of the 1994
Republican revolution, quickly became too focused on retaining power rather
than advancing the agenda that brought them victory.
With a few exceptions, like reforming welfare and balancing the budget,
Republicans' track record proves Coburn right. Now that Gingrich and Armey
have escaped the vortex of elected office, they have re-emerged as leading
advocates for governance guided by conservative standards.
Similarly, George W. Bush did not win election by promising to expand
Medicare entitlements or by declaring that his chief foreign policy goal
would be to "make the world safe for democracy." While those policies may
have produced some short-term political gain, their long-term results eroded
the public's confidence in Bush's ability and his party.
So, were the last two elections a referendum on the Republican Party's core
principles or its ability to deliver?
Numerous polls confirm that voters simply lost faith in Republicans but
remain strongly supportive of core conservative tenants like limited
government and low tax rates.
Rasmussen found that 59% of voters still agree with Ronald Reagan's
assessment that, more often than not, government is the problem, not the
solution. Another survey, taken immediately after the election, found that
63% believe that tax cuts are the best economic stimulus, compared to just
20% who want more government spending.
Those tenets illustrate the challenge confronting Barack Obama who, as
president, can no longer be all things to so many people, and the
frustration confronting voters whose only choices were Republicans who
failed to produce and Democrats who promised change.
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