The GOP trainwreck

Today I grieve for Amer­i­can politics.

I’ve been watch­ing my friends on var­i­ous social net­works as they react­ed to the results of last night’s elec­tion, and it has struck me odd to see how hap­py so many peo­ple are that Barack Oba­ma won. It’s alien to me not because I don’t under­stand — and to some extent approve of — the rea­sons he won. I do. I pre­dict­ed months ago that Oba­ma had the elec­tion pret­ty much sewn up. Mitt Rom­ney was a lack­lus­ter can­di­date at best, and ran one of the most incom­pe­tent cam­paigns of any can­di­date I’ve seen run for Pres­i­dent. Mitt lost because he could­n’t con­vince his own par­ty that he was any more than the least bad choice. His own par­ty did­n’t believe it, so the swing vot­ers weren’t con­vinced and he cer­tain­ly did­n’t win over any Democrats.

Last night as it became clear that Oba­ma had won I found myself pro­found­ly dis­ap­point­ed. I did­n’t under­stand why until I real­ized that I would have been just as (if not more) dis­ap­point­ed if the elec­tion had gone the oth­er way. Some­where along the line I have lost hope in the Amer­i­can polit­i­cal process, and it’s not because Oba­ma won. It’s because I don’t know how we can suc­ceed while con­vinc­ing our­selves that the less­er of two repug­nant options is a mandate.

Am I more relieved that Rom­ney lost than I would have been if Oba­ma lost? I don’t know. I’m cer­tain­ly relieved in dif­fer­ent ways. I despair for a nation whose best hope is pick­ing a can­di­date who fails to rep­re­sent our val­ues slight­ly less than the oth­er guy.

To be sure, our nation would have sur­vived four years of Rom­ney and will sur­vive four more years of Oba­ma. A recent arti­cle in Rea­son Mag­a­zine com­pared the US Con­sti­tu­tion to a well-designed air­plane: it’ll still fly if three out of the four engines fail. The anal­o­gy is dead on. The Con­sti­tu­tion still pro­tects us despite the assaults on it from the left and right alike. But for how much longer can we con­tin­ue knock­ing engines off our wings? Can our nation sur­vive anoth­er forty years of putting the sec­ond-worst can­di­dates in posi­tions of great power?

Deci­sions between right and wrong are easy. The dif­fi­cult choic­es are between two things that are right. The two major polit­i­cal par­ties in Amer­i­ca present us a false choice: that we can have fis­cal and eco­nom­ic san­i­ty or social and civ­il lib­er­ties, but not both.

##How the polit­i­cal par­ties see one another##

It is dif­fi­cult to believe that lib­er­als in Amer­i­ca think that we ought to indis­crim­i­nate­ly spend more mon­ey, but it is cer­tain that they believe pas­sion­ate­ly in social issues: free­dom to mar­ry, a wom­an’s right to choose whether to ter­mi­nate a preg­nan­cy, access to med­ical ser­vices, the polit­i­cal pow­er wield­ed by cor­po­rate enti­ties, and whether chil­dren in pub­lic schools ought to be indoc­tri­nat­ed with Chris­t­ian the­ol­o­gy. It would be naïve to ignore the fact that some of these aims are expen­sive to address and like­wise naïve to believe that these issues can be ade­quate­ly addressed by gov­ern­ment even with great expense. Nonethe­less it is this set of issues which pri­mar­i­ly dri­ve those who lean to the lib­er­al side in Amer­i­ca. Repub­li­cans are scary to these peo­ple because even in today’s rel­a­tive­ly dis­mal eco­nom­ic envi­ron­ment, we enjoy tremen­dous pros­per­i­ty. Tax­es creep incre­men­tal­ly and come in the form of tax «cuts» that actu­al­ly make the tax code more com­plex and make tax­es high­er for most peo­ple. If you’re not think­ing slip­pery slope, tax­es aren’t a huge issue for many peo­ple. Per­haps they should be, but in that light bal­anc­ing some­what high­er tax­es against the threat of back-alley abor­tions and their gay friends (or selves) being treat­ed as sec­ond-class cit­i­zens, yes of course the Repub­li­cans are scary.

Sim­i­lar­ly it is hard to believe that the major­i­ty of vot­ers who lean to the right care so strong­ly about the def­i­n­i­tion of mar­riage, the Fed­er­al Gov­ern­men­t’s man­date to inves­ti­gate med­ical pro­ce­dures, or prayer in schools that they are will­ing to dri­ve the nation into bank­rupt­cy over it. The right cares about reduc­ing the fed­er­al debt and sus­tain­able (if not bal­anced) bud­gets and are cor­rect­ly skep­ti­cal of gov­ern­men­t’s abil­i­ty to solve the prob­lems soci­ety faces even if we do spend tril­lions of dol­lars in the attempt. Democ­rats are scary to these peo­ple because the way that gov­ern­ment spends tax­pay­er mon­ey is not sus­tain­able and there is no scant his­tor­i­cal prece­dent1 for the idea that we will stop spend­ing beyond our means as soon as things «get bet­ter.» In that light, yes of course Democ­rats are scary.

If we vote only based on our fears, we will con­tin­ue sink­ing. It’s like falling into quick­sand. If we keep try­ing to pull our feet out, we will get sucked far­ther in. But if we calm down we can keep our head aloft and work our way out of the morass.

Here, how­ev­er, the blame must fall on the Repub­li­cans, because they are both more cor­rect and more wrong. They are cor­rect in that the slip­pery slope of tax­ing and spend­ing isn’t get­ting any less slip­pery and isn’t get­ting us more results. This is not absolute; there are things that gov­ern­ment does suc­cess­ful­ly. But we ought to be tak­ing a very hard look at what gov­ern­ment is doing poor­ly and charg­ing us a lot for.

Where they are wrong is on social issues. Even if they aren’t wrong about social issues, they are wrong to place a high­er impor­tance on those issues than on the eco­nom­ic health of the nation. Because the Repub­li­cans at least sort of have the right idea eco­nom­i­cal­ly, it is uncon­scionable that they won’t com­pro­mise on social and civ­il issues. And by «com­pro­mise,» I’m not talk­ing about sit­ting politi­cians mak­ing deals with oth­er politi­cians. I’m talk­ing about what kinds of can­di­dates they keep offering.

Let’s take three hot-but­ton Repub­li­can issues; those issues no Repub­li­can can be nom­i­nat­ed with­out toe­ing the par­ty line on: free­dom to mar­ry, abor­tion, and school prayer.

##Free­dom to marry##

First the def­i­n­i­tion of mar­riage. We’re argu­ing over the def­i­n­i­tion of a word and a few tax breaks. The tax breaks are neg­li­gi­ble and words in lan­guage are con­stant­ly chang­ing. If you don’t believe that, I call your atten­tion to the word «gay.»

Sec­ond point about def­i­n­i­tion of mar­riage: is it even an issue that ought to be decid­ed by the Fed­er­al Gov­ern­ment? If you’re a Demo­c­rat it’s under­stand­able that you think the answer is yes, but if you’re a Repub­li­can, you’re sup­posed to believe in the Tenth Amend­ment and the lim­i­ta­tion of Fed­er­al pow­er. So even if you believe that ced­ing ground on the def­i­n­i­tion of mar­riage is dan­ger­ous, ought­n’t the Fed­er­al gov­ern­ment stay out of the way so that same-sex cou­ples in Iowa can have the free­dom to mar­ry while they don’t in Texas?

Third point about the def­i­n­i­tion of mar­riage, and fair warn­ing that it is a point I will repeat: even assum­ing you dis­agree with me on the above two points, there are sub­stan­tial num­bers of vot­ers out there that would love to vote for eco­nom­ic san­i­ty if it did­n’t mean vot­ing for a can­di­date that oppos­es the free­dom to mar­ry. Is it worth alien­at­ing those voters?

To clar­i­fy: it isn’t that the issue isn’t impor­tant. It is impor­tant to Democ­rats. It’s a deal-break­ing issue for Democ­rats. It’s dif­fi­cult to fath­om why Repub­li­cans think it’s more impor­tant than hav­ing a sol­vent nation. In case that was­n’t clear: any­one who believes that call­ing it a «civ­il union» instead of a «mar­riage» is more impor­tant than repeal­ing Oba­macare is not a Repub­li­can. Said per­son is an idiot.

##Abor­tion##

Here, I can see why the pro-life fac­tion places so much impor­tance on the issue. If you believe that human life begins at con­cep­tion, ter­mi­nat­ing human life is killing. And killing with­out life-threat­en­ing jus­ti­fi­ca­tion is mur­der. I even under­stand why one would­n’t want excep­tions for rape and incest. In the case of rape we ought to pun­ish the rapist, not pun­ish a Con­sti­tu­tion­al­ly-pro­tect­ed Unit­ed States Cit­i­zen who did noth­ing wrong. I don’t agree that a zygote should enjoy all the Con­sti­tu­tion­al and legal pro­tec­tions that a human being who can sur­vive out­side of the womb can, but if I did, I’d prob­a­bly agree with all the rest.

How­ev­er, even if I did agree about that the life of the moth­er is a very impor­tant con­sid­er­a­tion. It’s self-defense. If you have to kill some­one to pro­tect your­self it isn’t con­sid­ered mur­der. There are dif­fer­ent stan­dards in dif­fer­ent states, but the con­cept is con­sis­tent. If the pres­ence of the unborn child — even a Con­sti­tu­tion­al­ly-pro­tect­ed cit­i­zen — threat­ens the life of the moth­er, the moth­er has the absolute right to defend her­self against that threat to her life.

This gets tricky in a few ways: first because it’s unclear how severe the threat to life needs to be in order for an abor­tion to be «med­ical­ly nec­es­sary». Is a 90% chance that the moth­er will die «med­ical­ly nec­es­sary»? How about a 50% chance? Heck, if I were in a sit­u­a­tion where there was even a 1 in 1000 chance I’d die I’d want to do what­ev­er was nec­es­sary not to be that 1 in 1000.

But it is worse than that: med­ical sit­u­a­tions — espe­cial­ly life-threat­en­ing ones — are time-sen­si­tive. Once some­one’s dead that’s it. There has to be lee­way for med­ical deci­sions that seemed to be the right and nec­es­sary thing to do at the time, even if on reflec­tion or pro­vid­ed with lat­er evi­dence it proved not to be nec­es­sary. Med­ical deci­sions don’t come with a book­ie’s point spread and fore­sight is rarely 20/20.

But it’s even stick­i­er than that. Who gets to make the deter­mi­na­tion whether an abor­tion was med­ical­ly nec­es­sary, jus­ti­fi­able self-defense, or homi­cide? A fed­er­al bureau­crat? A sher­if­f’s deputy with­out advanced med­ical train­ing? A doc­tor oth­er than the patien­t’s own doc­tor? Some­one with­out access to the patien­t’s med­ical records and his­to­ry? Well, maybe. But then you’d need to get the patien­t’s med­ical records and his­to­ry and tes­ti­mo­ny as to the specifics of the med­ical sit­u­a­tion. Med­ical records are priv­i­leged infor­ma­tion that in most cas­es can­not be released to a pros­e­cu­tor with­out a sub­poe­na. So is any infor­ma­tion that doc­tors and patients pro­vide one anoth­er. More­over, if you are pros­e­cut­ing a crime, the Fifth Amend­ment pro­vides near-absolute pro­tec­tion against the patient or the doc­tor pro­vid­ing any tes­ti­mo­ny against themselves.

So what am I say­ing here? Just that even if I agreed with the pro-life fac­tion on the prin­ci­ple, I can’t see any way to enforce any anti-abor­tion laws with­out repeal­ing a sub­stan­tial part of the Bill of Rights. And that is some­thing to which I am cat­e­gor­i­cal­ly opposed.

Even ignor­ing this, how can any Repub­li­can jus­ti­fy sup­port­ing a fed­er­al ban on abor­tions? At the state lev­el OK, but fed­er­al bans? Every piece of pro­posed fed­er­al antiabor­tion leg­is­la­tion has explic­it­ly claimed stand­ing under the Con­sti­tu­tion’s Inter­state Com­merce Clause.2 So let me get this straight: you can claim to be a Repub­li­can and at the same time advo­cate expand­ing the scope of what the Fed­er­al Gov­ern­ment can do using the Inter­state Com­merce Clause as jus­ti­fi­ca­tion? With a straight face? Sor­ry, but I’m fil­ing that one under Not In Line with Repub­li­can Val­ues. Besides, unless the patient pays for the pro­ce­dure in one state and then the doc­tor per­forms the pro­ce­dure in anoth­er state, how can an abor­tion pos­si­bly be relat­ed to inter­state commerce?

By requir­ing that a can­di­date for fed­er­al elect­ed office be vocal­ly in favor of pro-life leg­is­la­tion, the Repub­li­cans alien­ate vot­ers who would be on the side of fis­cal respon­si­bil­i­ty except for the fear of the FBI inves­ti­gat­ing mis­car­riages. That’s a lot of rea­son­able peo­ple who would love to vote Repub­li­can except for this deal-break­er of an issue. I under­stand that it’s a deal-break­er for Repub­li­cans as well, but Repub­li­cans will have to let go of that. Why? Because any vic­to­ries Repub­li­cans will have on this issue will be out of line with Repub­li­can val­ues and will be entire­ly pyrrhic — at best sym­bol­ic — ones.

##School prayer##

Once again, Democ­rats fear gov­ern­ment endorse­ment or pro­mo­tion of reli­gion. Even if they are being over­ly cau­tious or over­ly sen­si­tive, it’s still a pret­ty impor­tant part of this nation’s found­ing prin­ci­ples. What do Repub­li­cans lose if they let go of this issue? Their kids might have less time in school where they have to sit qui­et­ly and do nothing.

Sor­ry, this too is not worth throw­ing away our coun­try’s eco­nom­ic sta­bil­i­ty over. You send your kids to school so that they can work hard and learn infor­ma­tion, not to sit qui­et­ly doing noth­ing. Per­son­al­ly, I’m a big fan of sit­ting qui­et­ly doing noth­ing, but that does­n’t mean it ought to be part of a pub­lic school’s cur­ricu­lum. If you want your child to pray before start­ing the day, should­n’t you be doing some­thing about that at home, before your child leaves the house and goes off to school?

Besides, I’m pret­ty sure that Jesus had some­thing to say about pray­ing in pub­lic.3

##What am I ask­ing for?##

Repub­li­cans have no one to blame but them­selves for hand­ing Oba­ma the elec­tion. Repub­li­cans thought that putting a Repub­li­can who was fis­cal­ly mod­er­ate on the tick­et would get them the votes of inde­pen­dent and swing vot­ers. By doing so they mis­judged the impor­tance of their own mes­sage. So long as Repub­li­cans keep scar­ing off social­ly pro­gres­sive and fis­cal­ly con­ser­v­a­tive vot­ers, Repub­li­cans will keep los­ing elec­tions. Amer­i­cans are hun­gry for eco­nom­ic reform, but increas­ing­ly Amer­i­cans are turned off by the planks in the Repub­li­can plat­form con­cern­ing social issues. That trend is only like­ly to increase. Regard­less, those are the issues that don’t even mat­ter very much to most Repub­li­cans with the excep­tion of abor­tion, and that’s an issue where Repub­li­cans can at best hope for a feel-good mea­sure that does­n’t change anything.

I’m not ask­ing that Repub­li­cans com­pro­mise Repub­li­can val­ues. I’m demand­ing that Repub­li­cans return to Repub­li­can val­ues, and get their pri­or­i­ties straight. You can com­plain about Oba­ma run­ning the coun­try into the poor­house all you like, but Repub­li­cans are the ones who chose Mitt Rom­ney, a can­di­date doomed to fail­ure because he com­pro­mised on the impor­tant issues and stood firm on the mean­ing­less ones.

What is dis­tress­ing is that the GOP shows no signs of learn­ing from that mistake.


  1. As Paul Kienitz kind­ly point­ed out, this is incor­rect. There is his­tor­i­cal prece­dent. https://plus.google.com/u/0/101800996101419154554/posts/7SRLwQxKnqa 
  2. Arti­cle I, Sec­tion 8, Clause 3: [Con­gress shall have Pow­er] To reg­u­late Com­merce with for­eign Nations, and among the sev­er­al States, and with the Indi­an tribes; 
  3. Matthew 6:6 But when you pray, go into your room, close the door and pray to your Father, who is unseen. Then your Father, who sees what is done in secret, will reward you. 

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