The Republican Governing Vision: Not
Robert Borosage
Campaign for America's Future
This should be a banner year for
Republicans. To pick up the six seats they need to take control of the
Senate, Republicans need only to pocket three open seats in red-state
South Dakota, West Virginia, and Montana, and knock off endangered
incumbents in states Obama lost in 2012 like Louisiana, Alaska,
Arkansas, and North Carolina.
This should have been a dead-pipe cinch, given an economic recovery
that still hasn’t reached most families, a dysfunctional Washington,
two-thirds of voters thinking the country is headed in the wrong
direction, the growing disapproval of the president, the millions in
“dark money” flowing into right-wing attack ads and the lousy turnout
predictable in a sixth-year bi-election.
Yet with the election a week away, Republicans still haven’t been
able to close the deal. Karl Rove, conservatism’s twisted guru, while
urging big money to dig deep, advised
that “it is not enough for Republicans to remind [voters] of Mr.
Obama’s many failings; voters want to know how the GOP would move the
country forward.”
Republicans are relentless at pointing out the “failings.”
From the start, “Not Obama” was their mantra, and fear – ISIS, Ebola,
immigrants, Those People – their currency. They would handcuff
Democratic incumbents to Obama and let them sink together. However, what
Rove calls a “governing vision” has proved to be the problem. The
Republican agenda for the economy? Republicans are glib at saying what
it is not – not Obama – but get tongue-tied when trying to explain what
it is.
The problem is when the conversation turns from horse race to issues,
“not Obama” isn’t exactly persuasive. Obama is for health care reform,
for comprehensive immigration reform, for raising the minimum wage, for
equal pay for equal work, for free all-day preschool, for rebuilding our
infrastructure and putting people to work, for paid family leave, for
making college more affordable, for insuring that the rich and
corporations pay a more fair share of our taxes to help pay for this
stuff. Republicans voted virtually in lock step against all these in
Congress and oppose them on the campaign trail. While Obama hasn’t
exactly been a forceful advocate of these reforms, the reforms
themselves are popular.
So what are Republicans for instead? They have nothing beyond
pretense to replace the health care reforms they would repeal. They have
learned nothing from the conservative debacle that drove the economy
off the cliff. They are for lowering taxes on the rich and corporations,
for deregulating Wall Street and corporations, for slashing spending on
“bloated government.” Their public works agenda is to build the
Keystone pipeline, and charter Big Oil even more to plunder public lands
and offshore areas. They pledge to do to the U.S. what right-wing
ideologues have done to Kansas – and there even Republicans are outraged. There is no there there.
The conservative mantra about the economy – lower taxes, less
spending, less regulation – is political comfort food. Voters have heard
it for decades: it is familiar and it offers assurance in an unsure
time. Only it is way beyond its due date. Even country-club
conservatives find it less than compelling. The U.S. Chamber of Commerce
wants a big infrastructure project to rebuild the country. More and
more insurance companies are factoring in the projected costs of climate
change. Even purblind education reformers agree on the benefits of
universal pre-k. Mitt Romney helped Occupy make inequality and fair
taxes compelling concerns.
By all rights, this should be a big Republican year – and it still
could be. Only instead of Mitch McConnell choosing the color of the
drapes for the office of the Senate Majority Leader, he’s fighting a
pitched battle to hold his own seat. Democratic incumbents have
struggled to show their independence from the president, while focusing
on various popular reforms that the president actually supports. But
while they are pretzeled, Republicans haven’t sealed the deal for one
simple reason. They have no plan to make this economy work for the many
and not the few. They can’t govern because they have no governing
vision. And increasingly, the old gospel no longer summons belief, nor
covers up that glaring reality.
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