These are tumultuous, unsettled, uncertain times and it would be foolish of me to try to predict how things will go in the next few weeks, but I would like to stand back a bit while I watch reports obsessively on television, and make a few remarks about what I think might develop over the next several months. Let me say to begin that I am becoming more and more aware of how important the victories of Warnock and Ossoff will prove to be.
The Republican Party is clearly in crisis, triggered in part
by the extraordinary fact that Republican senators, members of the House of
Representatives, and even the vice president himself were threatened in the
Capitol not in their role as representatives of others but in their own
personal physical selves. Being rushed to safety by members of the Secret
Service with guns drawn while a mob bangs on the doors really does seem to
concentrate the mind something awful.
Here, stated briefly, is what I think may happen once we get
past the present period of crisis. I think it is quite possible that several
Republican senators will leave the party, declare themselves to be
Independents, and vote with the Democrats in return for various political
favors in legislation and the like, an eventuality made possible by the
victories in Georgia. This in turn will increase the probability of statehood
for the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico, giving the Democrats a comfortable
majority in the Senate and even making it possible to kill the filibuster. The
enormous grassroots support for Trump will not disappear and there will be many
Republican members of the House and some Republican senators who will continue
to rely on it. But so long
as Trump (and Don Junior, his mini-me) continues to play an active role in
national politics it will be impossible for the Republicans to maintain the
unstable coalition of forces that has made them so successful in local and
congressional politics despite their repeated failures at the presidential
level.
If such a realignment takes place, it will have the effect,
as I have observed before, of shifting Biden’s legislative program somewhat to
the right. However, the way will be open for progressive forces to continue to
build their strength in the party, if they have the wit and energy to seize
that opportunity.
As an old guy who learned what he knows about politics when
the mimeograph machine was still cutting edge, I am endlessly fascinated and
surprised by how much information can be acquired through technology about the
identity of the individuals who were part of the insurrectionist mob. I love
the fact that even those rioters who were not so stupid as to take selfies and
post them on social media from inside the Capitol building can nevertheless be
placed there thanks to the fact that they all have cell phones that were turned
on. I mean, good Lord, who needs secret police!
One final observation. Josh Hawley, as I noted, clerked for
Chief Justice John Roberts. I would love to know what Roberts thinks about his
protégé now.
I don’t at all share your optimism about statehood for the District and Puerto Rico or for ending the filibuster. Manchin, for one, is against both. Republicans who leave their party won’t become liberal Democrats. They’ll vote with the Democrats on organization of the Senate etc, but I don’t see them buying into the left’s agenda. On strengthening the party down-ballot, I agree wholeheartedly. Obama pretty well ignored the party for eight years and the Democrats are still paying the price. Republicans flipped something like four state assemblies in November in what was supposed be a Democrat year.
ReplyDeleteI suspect Roberts shares Danforth's views on Hawley.
For those of you who may not be aware of what former senator Danforth has said about his successor, Sen. Hawley, you can find it here:
ReplyDeletehttps://www.kansascity.com/news/politics-government/article248346830.html
You may recall that then Sen. Danforth was also the sponsor of Clarence Thomas for the Supreme Court.
I don't know exactly what will occur, but I doubt that the U.S. is going back to "business as usual" so easily after 4 years of Trump and the proto-fascist storming of the Capitol building.
ReplyDeleteI sense that U.S. politics in the near and maybe not so near future will be defined not by what the President and Congress do, but what happens from below, from the proto-fascist street forces and the progressive street forces, as well as by the huge influence of social media in influencing how people think politically, in positive and negative terms.
The last time the GOP published a party platform, it supported Puerto Rican statehood. I grant that this was probably empty talk, and that they included it based on the assumption that it would never happen. But still, it was there in the platform.
ReplyDeleteFrom an Irish friend, not quite up to Heaney's standards:
ReplyDeleteA mob of the MAGA persuasion
Conducted a Capitol invasion.
Though many were armed,
They departed unharmed.
And that’s how we know
They’re Caucasian.
Speaking of Hawley, retired senator Danforth seems to have a knack for picking the world's most awful proteges. First it was Clarence Thomas, now Josh Hawley, but this insurrection seems to join them in yet another way besides Danforth. Justice Thomas's wife "Ginny" is on a nonprofit that funded, organized, and transported 85 bus loads of rioters to the capital.
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