From Harold Meyerson, The American Prospect <[email protected]>
Subject Meyerson on TAP: How the Republicans Ceased to Be a Party and Became a Cult
Date February 18, 2021 10:18 PM
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**FEBRUARY 18, 2021**

Meyerson on TAP

How the Republicans Ceased to Be a Party and Became a Cult

Every unhappy family is unhappy in its own way, Tolstoy famously noted,
and the Republicans certainly are charting a novel course for their own.
The rift between the Trump camp and the not-quite-so-Trump camp is a
remarkable one for a political party, as it's not really about policy
or ideology or rival economic interests or any of the things that
usually divide political parties.

It's certainly not about toeing any party line on policy. Some of the
most die-hard conservative party leaders, like Pennsylvania Sen. Patrick
Toomey and Wyoming Rep. Liz Cheney, have been censured by various party
committees because they failed to affirm Donald Trump's innocence in
the matter of the January 6th insurrection.

This bears no resemblance to the previous divisions that have torn, or
almost torn, our political parties apart. The Whigs collapsed because
their Southern and Northern wings diverged on the question of
slavery's expansion. So, for the same reason, did the Democrats of
1860, who ran two candidates, one Northern, one Southern, for president
(which enabled Republican Abraham Lincoln to win the White House).
Having attended the 1968 Democratic Convention in Chicago as the
world's most junior staffer, I witnessed the party tear itself to
pieces over the Vietnam War.

The very fact that no issue except Trump himself divides the Republicans
today reflects the larger fact that issues hardly matter to today's
GOP. The media have largely glossed over the astonishing fact that the
party neglected to adopt, propose, or even write a platform in 2020. All
that mattered was affirming Trump, which basically meant affirming the
continuation of the constant slander and vilification he heaped upon all
whom he despised. His hatreds were fueled by his racism, sexism,
nativism, and homophobia, but the racism, sexism, nativism, and
homophobia weren't in themselves what caused some Republicans to break
from Trump. Republicans had long supported race-based voter suppression,
the deportation of undocumented immigrants, the denial of physical
autonomy to women, and so on-just in a more genteel way.

Trump upped the ante on all of these, but the essence of his presidency
was his own rage-filled posturing on such matters, subsuming them into
his persona as the nation's angry-white-man-in-chief. What set him
apart was not his commitment to these policies as such, but to the
constant vitriol and violation of civic norms with which he expressed
and personalized them. Those became the litmus tests that defined
Trumpian true believers: Either you affirmed (actually, relished)
Trump's violations of norms and open disdain for "the other" as the
basis of your political identity or you weren't a real Republican. By
extension, either you believed Trump's Big Lie and his myriad smaller
ones, or you weren't a real Republican.

Republican elected officials still able to periodically grasp reality
have had to play along with these lies for fear of political extinction.
Those who've tried to split the difference-we're looking at you,
Mitch McConnell-have reaped a whirlwind yet to descend.

Which is why the Republicans are unhappy in their own way. It's a way
that's unique for a political party, but quite common for what the GOP
has become: a cult.

~ HAROLD MEYERSON

Follow Harold Meyerson on Twitter

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