THE DUOPOLY WATCH | Steven
Jonas, MD, MPH
In
the 1980 Repub. primaries, Ronald Reagan won a convincing victory over George
H.W. Bush. Reagan was considered a “new” Republican, in the Barry
Goldwater mold, while George Herbert Walker Bush was considered an “old”
Republican, in the Nixon mold, but with the latter’s many rough edges burnished
away. Bush was indeed an old Republican, but from a line of true
right-wingers, very unlike Ike “Let’s Continue on with the New Deal but Just
Modify it a Bit here and There” Eisenhower. In fact, a G.H.W. Bush
grandfather, George Herbert Walker, was
a very early (1923) foreign contributor to Adolf Hitler and the German Nazi
Party.
GHW’s father, Prescott Bush, was a banker for Nazi Germany, who continued doing
business for them after Nazi Germany declared war on the United States following
the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor. Indeed, Franklin Roosevelt, who of
course knew the Bushes socially, had to call Prescott in February, 1942 and
threaten him with arrest and imprisonment under the Trading with the Enemy Act
if he did not stop doing so.
None
of this information was ever made very public, however, and GHW Bush sailed
along, both politically and in government, becoming CIA Director under President
Gerald Ford, 1976-77. Of
course, among other things, this Texan was “Texan oil” while Reagan, the former
“B movie” movie star and spokesman for Chesterfield cigarettes and General
Electric, later Governor of California, was, in part, at least, backed by
California oil (as well as a group of very wealthy, right-wing, California
businessmen, brought together behind him by his second wife’s (Nancy) far
right-wing physician father). And in the primaries Reagan was moving
steadily Right, never letting Bush outflank him, beginning what I have for some
years now called the Rightward
Imperative of the Republican Party. It
had started when Nixon developed what was called “The Southern Strategy”
(politically taking over the South when the Democrats pushed through civil
rights legislation in the mid-1960s) and the “War on Drugs,” both racist
enterprises aimed at cornering the racist/white supremacist vote for the Repubs.
(a strategy that has worked very effectively for them down
to this very day).
Reagan
added a new wrinkle for them, which has also worked down to this very day:
forging a close alliance with the Religious Right. Now both George
and Barbara Bush, as noted being, in relative terms, old-line Republicans, and
certainly traditional Protestants, were believers in birth control and in fact
had been long-time Board members of the Texas Branch of Planned
Parenthood. Reagan surprised Bush with the offer of his
Vice-Presidential slot. One of the conditions he placed on the offer
was that both Bush’s resign from their Planned Parenthood Board
seats. Which they promptly did. And so began the Republicans’’
alliance with the Religious Right, which has grown
ever-closer over the years.
As
is well known, the Religious Right is against equal rights for the LBGTQ
community, is against freedom-of-choice in the outcome of Pregnancy, is against
birth control in general and using public funds for its support in particular,
is for taxpayer funding for parochial schools and home-schooling (most of which
is carried out by Religious-Rightists who don’t want their children “tainted” by
“modern” ideas like the theory of evolution or the scientific understanding that
human-caused global warming is a very real and very present danger), and in
general are against any government regulations that offend their “religious
sensibilities.” And these policies have been central
planks in both Repub. policy and the Party’s platforms for
many years now.
The
Party has long fought to maneuver the anti-abortion rights (hardly “Pro Life”)
movement into a position where Roe v. Wade could be successfully overturned by a
Republican Supreme Court. In modern
times, the Party is violently opposed to the Obergefell decision extending gay
marriage rights to all 50 states, strongly opposes any efforts the Federal and
State levels to provide discrimination protections for the LGBTQ community, and
so-on-and-so-forth, and many elements in it would hope that a Repub. Supreme
Court would overturn it too.
And
so, in every election from 1980 through 2012, win or lose, the Religious Right
was a central part of the Republican base. For
example, in the 2004 Presidential election, Karl Rove, running an increasingly
unpopular candidate (President George W. Bush), arranged to put antigay marriage
amendments-or-such on the ballots of 12
swing-and-usually-reliably- red-but-not-always states to draw Religious Rightists
to the polls. The strategy worked, to perfection. In 2012, Mitt Romney supported the
“person-at-birth” Constitutional amendment.
But
then came the 2016 election and the rise of you-know-who. Not exactly
an ideal candidate with whom to woo the Religious Right:
twice-divorce/thrice-married, a proudly boastful “lady’s man,” a former Democrat
who had supported abortion and gay rights, and who as an upper-crust New York
businessman has many gay friends and associates, who in his businesses did not,
shall we say, operate at the highest level of ethical standards, was not a
regular church-goer, mis-cited the Bible when given the opportunity, and so on
and so forth. Furthermore, he appeared to be appealing to white workers
left behind both by the export of capital and the automation of
production.
Indeed,
A) Trump was openly running on racism (from his birtherism to his anti-Mexican
xenophobia), B) he undertook what in hindsight was a brilliant and brilliantly
executed strategy to develop a totally non-traditional base, for Repubs., in the
white working class, his racism certainly appealing to some of them, and C)
openly revealed a strong authoritarian streak.
Now
that set of positions just happens to appeal to persons who believe that a
particular English translation of the Bible, created by a committee of 52
scholars and theologians at the beginning of the 17th century
for the English ruling class --- the “King James Version” --- somehow represents
the “inerrant word of God.” And not only that, that following its
prescriptions, as interpreted by the true believers, of course, should be
enforced on everyone else, by the use of the criminal law if necessary.
This
theory of government places “God,” as interpreted by certain persons, of course,
above the Constitution. It is known as
“Reconstructionism/ Dominionism.” Among the prominent Republican
Dominionists are the Vice-President-elect, Mike Pence, the Secretary of Housing
and Urban Development, Dr. Ben Carson, and Sens. Ted Cruz and Marco Rubio. Nevertheless, Trump,
even if not an obvious true believer himself, and apparently not a Dominionist
(if for no other reason that being one would place God above himself) did appeal
in one or another way to Republican Religious
Fundamentalists.
The
speed at which the volte face in terms of who and what the true
Trumpite base is/are is being undertaken is quite remarkable. I will
begin to deal with how the Left may be able to deal effectively with this
ever-growing threat in my next column.
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