Some Republicans want the party to break from its longtime free-market agenda and focus instead on the needs and frustrations of workers. Others see danger in moving away from the legacy of Reagan.
The drama in the House of Representatives that ended on Jan. 7 with the late-night election of Kevin McCarthy as speaker after four days and 15 ballots revealed a Republican party coping with an identity problem, if not a crisis.
Is today’s Republican party conservative or populist? Is its patron saint Ronald Reagan or Donald Trump? Is it more intent on slashing government spending or preserving entitlement programs? Did it underperform in the 2022 midterm elections because it failed to mobilize its base or because it failed to reassure other voters wary of extremism? The divisive House debate offered no clear answers.
But Sen. Josh Hawley of Missouri thinks he has one: The Republican party, he argues, needs to chart its path forward by becoming, finally and unequivocally, the party of the American working class.
Sen. Hawley advanced perhaps the most provocative midterm postmortem when he wrote a piece in the Washington Post declaring that “the old Republican Party is dead.” The much-anticipated giant red wave didn’t materialize in 2022, he wrote, because Republicans have failed to complete a necessary transformation into the party of working-class Americans, who have been drifting into its ranks for years.
Sen. Hawley is at the forefront of a coterie of younger Republicans, in Congress and think tanks, who advocate policies that would mark a sharp break from the conservative, free-market gospel that has been the backbone of the GOP for more than half a century. They argue for abandoning free trade in favor of a network of tariffs to protect American goods and jobs, swearing off cuts to entitlement programs on which the working class rely, breaking up big tech firms, clamping down harder on immigration and finding common ground with union workers.
The incoming chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee, Rep. Jason Smith, promises “a tax code that supports the millions of working-class families.” Sen. Marco Rubio has sponsored legislation that would funnel billions in government help to build or rebuild critical industries on American soil. Sen. Tom Cotton has authored a bill to shift government spending away from college education and toward workplace training programs.
If this sounds like a new formula for activist government, Republican-style—well, it is. In an interview, Sen. Hawley argues that this pivot would represent not a break from Republican beliefs but a return to the principles that guided the GOP in the days of Theodore Roosevelt and William McKinley, when the party was “avowedly a nationalist party.” Moreover, he says the move is politically essential: “We are not a majority party currently. If we want to be a majority party, we have to bring these working-class voters back to us.”
Still, such a pivot will be difficult to execute, with as much potential to tear apart the Republican party as to transform it. The business community, a core constituency that underwrites many GOP campaign efforts, generally prefers free trade over government-managed trade, sees virtue in immigration, and hopes for organized labor to be curbed rather than encouraged.
Others in the party see peril in moving away from what has been a bedrock Republican philosophy: that free-market policies produce broad economic growth that benefits all Americans.
The movement is based on a premise that traditional Republican policies “somehow leave behind the working class,” says retiring Pennsylvania Sen. Patrick Toomey, a free-market conservative. “And of course that’s spectacularly wrong.” In his farewell address in the Senate in December, Mr. Toomey declared: “I hope we resist the temptation to adopt the protectionist, nativist, isolationist, redistributive policies that some are suggesting we embrace.” Others in the party, including some in the new, narrow majority in the House, consider the primary goal at the moment to be reducing government spending and debt, even if that means curbing entitlements.
And meanwhile, of course, Democrats aren’t simply going to let go of their traditional ties to unions and working-class voters. Indeed, President Biden took office vowing to reclaim such workers, and his administration is working on several fronts to rebuild those ties.
Two important forces are propelling this struggle. First, cultural issues and anxieties already have driven many working-class voters into Republican arms, making it necessary and perhaps inevitable that the party would consider doing more to accommodate their economic desires and needs.
Polling by The Wall Street Journal and NBC News in recent years shows the migration. The share of the Republican electorate made up of white voters without a college degree—a reasonable proxy for “working class voters”—has risen from 48% in 2012 to 62% this year. Similarly, VoteCast, a broad national survey of voters conducted by the Associated Press, found that white voters without a college degree picked Republicans over Democrats in 2022 congressional races by a margin of 65% to 32%.
“I think the most significant political shift of the past decade has been the socio-economic inversion of the two parties,” says Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas. “Historically, the Republicans were the party of the rich, and the Democrats were the party of the working class.” Now, he contends, that is being reversed. Indeed, both the 2020 general election and the 2022 midterms showed that Republicans are making inroads not just with white working-class voters but with working-class Hispanics and Blacks as well.
Sen. Cruz says that GOP energy policies promoting continued fossil-fuel use, in contrast with Democrats’ focus on climate change, also should be a central part of the agenda. “If you’re a Teamster and Democrats have spent two years trying to shut down trucking across the country, voting for Democrats is profoundly against your interests.”
In some respects, the call for a new economic gospel focused on working-class needs represents an attempt to shift the Republican appeal away from the cultural issues—gay rights, abortion, gun control—that have created a bond with many working-class voters until now and toward economic policies to address their concerns about the loss of manufacturing jobs and declining purchasing power.
Perhaps the most dramatic illustration of this shift came late last year, when Mr. Hawley and Mr. Rubio, along with four other Republican senators, voted to force railway companies to give unionized employees additional sick leave in a new labor contract. The measure failed, but the senators’ embrace of an attempt by the government to compel an industry to accept more liberal terms in a labor agreement represented a sharp turn away from traditional Republican reliance on the wisdom of free markets and business leaders.
The second factor is that former president Donald Trump, despite his flaws and the damage he has done to the party in other ways, showed the potential for the Republican party to expand its reach into traditional Democratic constituencies. Indeed, the move to become the working-class party merely represents a continuation, and perhaps culmination, of the trends Mr. Trump unleashed.
Tony Fabrizio, who was a pollster for both of Mr. Trump’s presidential campaigns, argues that Republicans can attract adherents for their ideas for government action now precisely because working-class voters think previous policies have ignored their needs. “The people who are most angry and feel most left behind by government are those voters,” Mr. Fabrizio says.
Political jockeying aside, the struggle for the hearts and votes of the working class continues a long quest to determine what economic philosophy best serves their interests in a 21st-century economy.
Ronald Reagan pushed the Republican party and the country as a whole to the right with his 1980 presidential election. In winning that year, he got the votes of thousands of “Reagan Democrats,” who detached from their traditional moorings in the Democratic party and voted Republican, at least in part out of a feeling that New Deal liberalism had run out of gas and was no longer working for them.
In the decades since, the economic picture for the working class has been mixed. The economic growth set off by the Reagan Revolution has, in fact, been good for a swath of American workers. Median household income has risen dramatically, to $70,784 in 2021 from $55,828 in 1984 in inflation-adjusted dollars, according to data from the St. Louis Fed.
At the same time, though, the manufacturing jobs that long had been the backbone of the working-class economy have been drying up, falling by 23% in the last three decades.
Meanwhile, the new globalized, tech-driven economy has produced growing income inequality between those at the top of the economic ladder and workers in the middle. Between 1980 and 2021, the gap between median income for those in the 90th percentile of American earners and those in the middle 50th percentile grew by 29%.
These trend lines have left many in the working class questioning both parties. Democrats’ traditional grip on the working class has loosened as the base of the party has shifted to wealthier, better-educated, socially liberal constituencies on the coasts. Ruy Teixeira, a political analyst who has long chronicled the political path of American workers, wrote a piece in the Atlantic just before last fall’s midterm elections titled “Democrats’ Long Goodbye to the Working Class.” He says in an interview: “We now have a situation where the Democrats regularly lose the working class vote.”
Rep. Debbie Dingell, a Democrat representing Michigan’s sixth district stretching west and south of Detroit, acknowledges that Mr. Trump “recognized the anxiety of people who‘d just seen their jobs go overseas and were worried about their retirement.”
But she also says that, under the Biden administration, Democratic policies have begun to reverse the trend lines, by spending billions of dollars on jobs improving U.S. infrastructure, creating clean-energy jobs and mounting efforts to bring back to the U.S. factories making, among other things, computer chips.
Rep. Dingell is launching within the House a new “Heartland Caucus,” a coalition of Democrats focused on advancing policies to benefit Americans residing in the broad center of the country. She frames that effort as part of a needed push by Democrats to reconnect with working-class voters, in workplaces as well as farms. “We have not lost them, but we have to remind them that we’re fighting for them,” she says. “We need to be in those union halls, we need to be on those family farms, we need to be in those veterans’ centers.”
On the Republican side, new-wave conservatives argue that Republicans have lost their way by expecting markets to work economic magic and by failing to acknowledge that market forces have been distorted by foreign competitors, particularly China.
Oren Cass, executive director of American Compass, a policy center that is in the forefront of rethinking traditional conservative economic ideas, says that the key for Republicans now is focusing on raising wages and “throwing out the supply-side conceit that if we make things better for capital and those with high incomes, everything will be better.”
Mr. Cass says it is noteworthy that this new conservative economic movement doesn’t automatically put individual tax cuts at the top of the priority list, as was long the case for Republicans. The flaws of that approach, he argues, were illustrated by the disaster that befell former British Prime Minister Liz Truss when she put forth a traditional, aggressive tax-cutting program only to see it lead to economic calamity and her rapid downfall.
Mr. Cass has worked with Sen. Cotton on his proposal for government-assisted workplace training and argues that Republicans can empower workers outside of the traditional big unions that Democrats support by prodding companies to put worker representatives on their boards. He also hopes recent legislation to boost domestic computer-chip production will be followed by similar measures to create incentives for American production of rare-earth minerals, electric-vehicle batteries and pharmaceutical components.
In a similar vein, Rep. Jim Banks, a leader of the House’s conservative Republican Study Committee, argued in a memo to Mr. McCarthy during the last Congress that Republicans should reverse their embrace of globalism. “For far too long,” he wrote, “both parties supported outsourcing working-class jobs overseas in the name of economic growth.”
Sen. Rubio, meantime, chides big corporations not only for shipping jobs overseas but also for embracing “woke” social views of the liberal left. He calls for a set of policies that penalize firms and investors that make certain investments in China and reward those who bring capital back to the U.S.
All this is enough of a departure from the past that it leaves some Republicans worried that their party is drifting toward mimicking Democratic reliance on government solutions and abandoning principles that have brought great electoral success.
“We have to get back to the basic principles of Reagan and Bush and build upon them, and add to those the questions of crime, education and, of course, inflation,” says Frank Fahrenkopf, a former national chairman of the Republican party.
The most difficult internal GOP debate may come on the question of entitlements—specifically the Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid programs that make up a growing piece of the federal spending.
In the prolonged House debate over choosing a new speaker, lawmakers frequently bemoaned the rising federal debt and the spending that is driving that debt, framing the problem as a kind of national crisis. And those opposing Mr. McCarthy as speaker used their leverage to force into place procedures that will make it easier for them to compel big, across-the-board spending cuts to handle the problem.
That at least implies a willingness to curb the big entitlement programs as part of the corrective effort. Sen. Hawley argues that would be a mistake. “I would warn against immediately going to working-class people and saying, ‘The Social Security and Medicare benefits you have been paying for is where we are going to go first.’”
Note:
Mr. Seib retired last year as the Journal’s executive Washington editor and weekly Capital Journal columnist. He has served most recently as a fellow at the Robert J. Dole Institute of Politics at the University of Kansas.
They will be to busy investigating Hunter Biden's dick pics, Anthony Fauci for doing his job, and trying to exact revenge on members of the J6 committee for laying out the facts of the rightturd insurrection.
ReplyDeleteAre you kidding? They're all in the War Room plotting the next Ukrainian offensive against Russia. They're hoping to use the 82nd and 101st Airborne along with 100,000 Poles for "moral support".
ReplyDeleteWTF are you talking about? That isn't going to happen.
ReplyDeleteNot this week, anyways.
ReplyDeleteAnd what if it'll happen nevertheless??? Derpy will hide inside closet and will babble: "Iy's not true. Ut's not true"???? :-)))
ReplyDeleteThat is your prediction for next week?
ReplyDeleteSo what? You would prefer ICBMs flying?
ReplyDeleteWho is the "you" who wants missiles to be fired at Russia by the US or by the US at Russia? It isn't me. I doubt Minus wants that. Is it Qtard?
ReplyDelete...fired at Russia by the US or by the US at Russia...
ReplyDeleteHa-ha-ha... you can't even spell it out, That nightmarish "Russian Satans, Poseidons, Zirkons and Burevestniks at USA cities"... to make big Ka-booms.
Because? Because people like you (you both) prefer oustrich policy of hiding your whole head in a sands of deNile.
Denial that RUSSIA WANTS DEFEAT YOU. U-S-A.
First and foremost.
Because you, through your prezidents, in sequance: Obama, Trump, Biden -- showed that you are scared oustriches... today.
There is nothing Ukraine would like better than for NATO and America to enter the conflict on their side.
ReplyDeleteThat is not going to happen.
And it's NOT because we're "afraid of Russia" or "Russian WMDs".
It's because only the American/Ukrainian oligarchies would benefit from defending Ukraine. And THEY aren't the one's who's sons and daughter would die in the conflict. THAT pain will fall on "the masses".
...and the American "masses" are done dying for their oligarch's promises.
ReplyDeleteYou want American masses to support you? The stupid propaganda and censorship by the USIC is having the reverse effect. We see the players and lies behind the wielders of the cloak of Gyges.
ReplyDeleteWe would only help the Ukrainian masses if they weren't the mere pawns of the oligarchy.
ReplyDelete...and if we were left to decide ourselves with actual facts, not by USIC propaganda about "poor Ukraine"...
ReplyDeleteAs Bartleby the Scribner said, "I'd rather not".
ReplyDeleteWithin Foucault’s assertion that society exists as a totalised field of
ReplyDeleteactions upon actions, ‘doing nothing’ perhaps takes on the role of a
radically subversive excess. This suggestion is consistent with Zizek’s
politics of withdrawal, or Bartleby politics.
Hence, Zizek is "the most dangerous philosopher in the West".
ReplyDeleteNow, ask yourself, "Cui bono"?
ReplyDeleteL. (Lucius) Cassius ille, quem populus Romanus verissimum et sapientissimum iudicem putabat, identidem in causis quaerere solebat, cui bono fuisset? - Cicero, "Pro Roscio Amerino"
ReplyDeleteI'll just hide in the closet like you suggested, Qtard. That should keep me safe from the nukes, yes? Qtard's suggestion? What does not be "scared oustriches" look like, Qtard?
ReplyDeleteWhat else horrifies us about unscrupulousness if not this? Why is the thought of someone twisting someone else round his little finger, even in innocent contexts, so beastly (for instance in Dostoevsky's Dyadyushkin son [Uncle's Dream, a novella published in 1859], which the Moscow Arts Theatre used to act so well and so cruelly)? After all, the victim may prefer to have no responsibility; the slave be happier in his slavery. Certainly we do not detest this kind of destruction of liberty merely because it denies liberty of action; there is a far greater horror in depriving men of the very capacity for freedom--that is the real sin against the Holy Ghost. Everything else is bearable so long as the possibility of goodness--of a state of affairs in which men freely choose, disinterestedly seek ends for their own sake--is still open, however much suffering they may have gone through. Their souls are destroyed only when this is no longer possible. It is when the desire for choice is broken that what men do thereby loses all moral value, and actions lose all significance (in terms of good and evil) in their own eyes; that is what is meant by destroying people's self-respect, by turning them, in your words, into rags. This is the ultimate horror because in such a situation there are no worthwhile motives left: nothing is worth doing or avoiding, the reasons for existing are gone. We admire Don Quixote, if we do, because he has a pure-hearted desire to do what is good, and he is pathetic because he is mad and his attempts are ludicrous.
ReplyDelete-Isaiah Berlin Letter to George Kennan (2/13/51)
As they say in Virginia (@ VMI), "Get your foot OFF my f-ing neck!"
ReplyDelete:P
ReplyDeleteBlogger -FJ the Dangerous and Extreme MAGA Jew said...
ReplyDeleteThere is nothing Ukraine would like better than for NATO and America to enter the conflict on their side.
That is not going to happen.
And it's NOT because we're "afraid of Russia" or "Russian WMDs".
It's because only the American/Ukrainian oligarchies would benefit from defending Ukraine. And THEY aren't the one's who's sons and daughter would die in the conflict. THAT pain will fall on "the masses".
So, you say that you are NOT ready to die for Dancig... eee, Narva this time?
Why Die for Danzig? - Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Why_Die_for_Danzig?
Why Die for Danzig? (French: Pourquoi mourir pour Dantzig?) is an anti-war French political slogan created on the eve of World War II.
Then, you can go start learning Russian... or Chinese. Just to be prepared.
\\I'll just hide in the closet like you suggested, Qtard. That should keep me safe from the nukes, yes?
ReplyDelete"Duck and Cover"(tm)
And I have NO relation to it what'so'ever. ;-P
\\Qtard's suggestion? What does not be "scared oustriches" look like, Qtard?
Well. Sorry. I forgot about your mental deficiency.
You can just start praying that someone smarter (like people from IC and Senat committies) will solve that problem... somehow.
I am not at all surprised that Qtard (due to HIS mental deficiency) has no answer. He exists only to criticize and blame others (such as "libtards"). And there was another slur he used. Was it "demon-rats", "demorats" or "democraps"? I forget.
ReplyDeleteHit me.
ReplyDeleteAsk your question. ;-P
That was already half-a-year after the September 1938 Munich agreement which wrested the Sudetenland from Czechoslovakia and awarded it to Hitler to satiate his appetite. That, in the words of Britain’s then-prime minister Neville Chamberlain, guaranteed “peace for our time.”
ReplyDeleteWhen he landed at Heston Aerodrome right after the deal was done, Chamberlain told the cheering crowd that awaited him: “The settlement of the Czechoslovakian problem, which has now been achieved is, in my view, only the prelude to a larger settlement in which all Europe may find peace. This morning I had another talk with the German Chancellor, Herr Hitler, and here is the paper which bears his name upon it as well as mine... We regard the agreement signed last night as symbolic of the desire of our two peoples never to go to war with one another again.”
.
ReplyDeleteBut no one in Europe was to sleep soundly again for many years to come, despite Chamberlain’s cynical sacrifice of a small democracy on the altar of peace.
.
Hot on the heels of the Munich Conference, Hitler began agitating for Danzig’s incorporation into the Third Reich. In April 1939 Poland warned that it would defy any German incursion. That presumably would subsequently oblige Warsaw’s allies to come to its aid.
ReplyDeleteAnd to forestall this, Déat wrote his commentary with the stirring headline that tauntingly asked Frenchmen whether they should really want to put their lives on the line for Danzig. Not only did Déat think that they shouldn’t, but he further portrayed the Poles as intransigent firebrands, whose irresponsible politicking was the source of all their tribulations.
They bring calamity on themselves by opposing Germany’s territorial demands, he asserted.
Looks damn familiar, isn't it?
Anyone who gets in the way of appeasers is sure to be castigated by them. In his address to the British people on September 27, 1938, a couple of fateful days before the signing of the Munich Agreement, Chamberlain made it seem that Czechoslovakia is the troublemaker, that it harasses Europe’s fellow-democracies with impertinent expectations: “We cannot in all circumstances undertake to involve the whole British Empire in war simply on her [Czechoslovakia’s] account. If we have to fight it must be on larger issues than that.”
ReplyDeleteYeah... and issues followed... isn't it?
It pays us to recall that Chamberlain maintained that “what we did was to save her [Czechoslovakia] from annihilation and give her a chance of new life as a new State, which involves the loss of territory and fortifications, but may perhaps enable her to enjoy in the future and develop a national existence under a neutrality and security comparable to that which we see in Switzerland today.”
Good idea? Worked as that charm?
Fight... your... own... war. America has no interest in European quarrels.
ReplyDeleteWilson tricked us into WWI. Roosevelt WWII. We've had enough European wars supported by US Democrats.
ReplyDeleteEspecially ones interested in building dachas on the Black Sea.
ReplyDelete\\Fight... your... own... war. America has no interest in European quarrels.
ReplyDeleteTOO... DAMN... LATE.
You are NECK deep in that quarrels.
OR.
You can do as Putin said -- admit defeat, and flee from Europe. COMPLETELY.
As it was from Afganistan.
But.
That'll be NOT the End, but only beginning of your (self)defeated march.
By the main street... without ochestra.
Imagine.
You are with a "neck tie".
Standing before a chasm.
With big stone in your hands.
"Europe" is written on it.
You can throw it.
Or jump yourself.
Or just fall together.
One thing you CANNOT -- severe that link. ;-P
That is FACT.
That is REALITY.
That nasty bitch, I know.
Three things are only certain in this World: death, taxes... and USA responsibility to protect it's NATO allies. ;-P
ReplyDeleteCaptain Obvious.
*cuts the rope...*
ReplyDelete*...washes hands of NATO* and their non-NATO charity cases.
ReplyDelete...while flying through that rift... like that Alice in Karrol's Wonderland. ;-P
ReplyDeleteGo signal me, when you'd see that smile without cat.
And report my greeting to Mad Hatter. ;-P
Minus: After a Lopsided Pro-Establishment RNC Committee Chairmanship Vote...
ReplyDeleteYou were hoping the MyPillow crack addict would win?
He was the best candidate in the field. Team DeSantis was only marginally better than Team Turtle-Mitch. Mitt Romney's niece is the worst possible choice for doling out campaign funds for 2024.
ReplyDeleteMike Lindell is nuts. If he is not now, he will be return to smoking crack after he loses his company. Due to the coming massive judgement against him for slandering Dominion.
ReplyDeleteSo??? For how long to wait for your reports from Wonderland???
ReplyDeleteMinus: ...washes hands of NATO* and their non-NATO charity cases.
ReplyDeleteThat is what Putin instructed his puppet dotard donald to do. Why he waited until Joe Biden was elected before going into Ukraine. Blaming Biden could help get his puppet reinstalled.
Only one problem with your theory, Dervy. Ukraine isn't a NATO member. Which is why he's being blamed for starting WWIII.
ReplyDeletebtw - If Hunter's laptop was Russian disinformation, why is Hunter now trying to get Republicans prosecuted for stealing his laptop and disclosing his "private" information?
ReplyDeleteHunter Biden's "legal team said their new outreach does not amount to confirmation of the laptop narrative that has been circulated on the right".
ReplyDelete"...Lowell, the Biden attorney, said that the new letters from Biden’s team 'do not confirm Mac Isaac’s or others’ versions of a so-called laptop'".
https://www.cnn.com/2023/02/01/politics/hunter-biden-laptop-contents-letter/index.html
\\That is what Putin instructed his puppet dotard donald to do. Why he waited until Joe Biden was elected before going into Ukraine. Blaming Biden could help get his puppet reinstalled.
ReplyDeleteYep.
Mobius brains -- everything is amounting to "blame Right-turds" in Derpy's... eggshell. ;-P
How do you call that rotten eggs in America? ;-P
Stinkbomb?
ReplyDeleteSeems like Google do not know tht name.
ReplyDeleteThat some rural dwellers should know/have separate word for an egg that became rotten...
Like "Varuca?"? ;)
ReplyDelete