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Monday, January 18, 2021

The Irrepressible GOP!

 


Friends, if you're down in the dumps about the recent election and the impending scourge of Bidenism, you'll want to read my latest article double-quick!  It's an analysis of all the reasons why life is about to get hairy for those dastardly Dems, and why Republicans, conservatives, and Trumpers shall rise again!


The GOP's Silver Linings Playbook


With the enthronement of President-Anointed Joe Biden, Republicans, conservatives, and Trumpers have much to be chagrined about. There are, however, signs that all is not lost for America. Some of those signs are obvious and unambiguous. Others take a little more imagination to perceive.

For one thing, based on exit polls, President Trump got a higher percentage of the non-white vote in 2020 than any Republican since Richard Nixon in 1960. Considering the acidity and frequency of the Left's attacks on Trump and Republicans for being “racist”, this is a remarkable achievement.

The saying used to be, “As California goes, so goes the nation.” Today, however, it's Florida that, as an economic dynamo and as a magnet for domestic migrants and immigrants, encapsulates the future of this country. And Florida, lest we forget, voted solidly for Trump, and it padded the Republican edge in the state legislature and sent two new GOP Congressmen to Washington. As time goes by, therefore, as more Hispanics and Asians assimilate and join the middle class, and as the Left's hackneyed bellyaching about racism grows stale, we can expect Republicans to further expand their share of the non-white vote.

In addition, despite predictions of a “blue wave” in 2020, the fact is that the Dems barely “won” the key states, often by margins of less than 1%. Republicans also gained a net of 141 seats in state legislatures across the country, a net of two state legislative chambers, one governorship, and 15 seats in the House of Representatives. None of this suggests that the GOP is at death's door. Quite the contrary.

These signs of Republican strength and staying power have been noted by many observers, but consider these factors as well:

    • Democrats will no longer be able to unify themselves around a message of anti-Trumpism. They will now have to govern, which means making hard choices, which in turn means (inevitably) disappointing and frustrating some elements of their base.

    • The press, which has been simpering in the Democrats' direction since 2016 as it dedicated itself single-mindedly to the task of toppling President Trump, will now resume, in some fashion, its role as the “Fourth Estate”. It will by necessity begin to criticize some Democrats and Democratic policies.

    • Biden and his team have advocated an ambitious, expensive agenda, but they face the problem that federal finances are already hopelessly overextended. If they spend frivolously, they risk igniting a fiscal crisis and ushering in a severe recession or a depression.

    • Try as they might to ignore the issue, Democrats will have to contend with the fact that their new titular leader was not so much elected by the people as summoned from the crypt. A more incongruous face for modern leftism would be hard to imagine.

    • Even if little changes in terms of our political and partisan dynamics, history suggests it is highly unlikely that the “party in power” will gain seats in the House and Senate in 2022. Thus, Republicans can be hopeful that they will retake Congress in the foreseeable future.

But that's not all! I would like to suggest two additional considerations that should give Republicans, conservatives, and Trumpers grounds for optimism.

On the face of it, the mass expulsion of many right-wing figures, including President Trump, from a wide range of social media platforms makes it difficult or impossible for them to compete with Democrats. In the short run, the Great Purge on Twitter, Facebook, YouTube, etc. does indeed hamper conservatives' ability to share their message(s) with the voters. The truth, however, is that Big Tech has been surreptitiously undermining conservative opinion leaders for years, by making it harder for them to build followings, to share their posts with a wide audience, and more recently by labeling and “fact-checking” information that conflicts with the Democratic Party line.

I would argue that, now that Big Tech's blatant bias and intolerance has been exposed, conservatives stand to gain. This is partly because the public will see Silicon Valley censorship for what it is — a naked power grab and an affront to democracy and free speech. It is also because Big Tech's influence depends on its monopoly position in various fields of information-sharing. Based on recent events, new social media platforms will arise, just as alternative news media sources have blossomed at the same time that the mainstream media has taken a hard left turn.

In essence, Big Tech has thrown down the gauntlet. It has declared its ideological and partisan preferences, and it has dared any American who thinks differently to take their business elsewhere. I already have. I won't be alone. As this transformation of the digital marketplace of ideas takes hold, Big Tech's power over public opinion won't increase — it will decrease. That's all to the good.

The last salutary development for Republicans and conservatives is also, on the face of it, a temporary setback. Many large corporations, in the wake of the “insurrection” at the U.S. Capitol on January 6th, are suspending or canceling their donations to GOP politicians. Yes, money talks in American politics, and thus losing a formerly reliable source of contributions is problematic, but the truth is that direct corporate funding of political campaigns is much less important than individual contributions.

More importantly, the incipient “divorce” between the GOP and a long list of mega-corporations, coupled with the efforts by many captains of industry to ingratiate themselves with “woke” activists and Democrats, means that the Republicans have a tantalizing opportunity to finish the work that Trump began. They can (re-)define themselves not only as the defenders of free speech, but also as the only party that is both populist and nationalist. While the Democrats increasingly parrot the agenda of educated, privileged, globalist elites, the GOP can assume the mantle of “America First” and advocate for American workers, strong borders, law and order, staying out of foreign wars, and evading the perils of European-style socialism. As plenty of politicians have proved over the years, running against Wall Street and the rich, and articulating the hopes and fears of the “little guy”, can be the ticket to electoral success.

For all these reasons, then, Republicans, conservatives, and Trumpers should take heart. Whatever the future of Donald Trump himself may be in American politics, he has laid the groundwork for a Republican Party and a conservative movement that are strong, dynamic, and growing.

Assuming that future elections are fair, or even reasonably fair, we have every reason to expect that the GOP will be back on top, and soon.


Dr. Nicholas L. Waddy is an Associate Professor of History at SUNY Alfred and blogs at: www.waddyisright.com. He appears on the Newsmaker Show on WLEA 1480/106.9.

 

And here it is at American Greatness:

 

https://amgreatness.com/2021/01/19/the-gops-silver-linings-playbook/ 

 

***

 

Boy, I make a lot of sense, don't I?  In other news, Senator Josh Hawley has landed on his feet and found a new publisher for what sounds like an outstanding book.  Kudos, Josh!

 

https://www.newsmax.com/newsfront/book-hawley-publisher/2021/01/18/id/1006085/ 

7 comments:

  1. The Disney Dumbo cartoon at the top of this article is an appropriate symbol for the current GOP. When the original "Dumbo" was released in 1941 it never did do anything to boost morale anywhere during World War 2, as far as I know.

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  2. "Even if little changes in terms of our political and partisan dynamics, history suggests it is highly unlikely that the “party in power” will gain seats in the House and Senate in 2022. Thus, Republicans can be hopeful that they will retake Congress in the foreseeable future."

    By failing to fight for their base the GOP will rapidly discover that their base is uninterested in voting for them. I don't anticipate a repeat of the 2010 or 2014 turn-out, not even close. I'm of two minds about it, on the one hand the GOP is the only vehicle we have, on the other it is holding us back with it's incipient cowardice which compels it's members to be nothing more than the shadow of the Democrat Party, lagging, but always following closely behind. The question is whether the vehicle is so slow and unwieldly that it might not be easier to go it on foot; I'm of the opinion that the answer at this point is to go it on foot. Ultimately, the sooner the GOP dies the better for the American people.

    Go vote locally, and on the national level let them be destroyed.

    "Assuming that future elections are fair, or even reasonably fair, we have every reason to expect that the GOP will be back on top, and soon."

    There is no reason to assume that. Precedent was just set, and precedent rules.

    We live in a one-party state, where the alternative to those rushing headlong to perdition are those merely contented to stroll there. The destination does not change in either case.

    Daily reminder: "You can't vote your way out of your planned murder." or, in the words of Benjamin Franklin, "Democracy is two wolves and a lamb voting on what to have for lunch. Liberty is a well armed lamb contesting the vote."

    Let us contest.

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  3. Dr.Waddy et al from Jack: Though of necessity I advance the moniker of Anonymous, I am not the one who posted the preceding remarks.

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    1. This is Ray here, and although I used "Anonymous" on this site at one time very briefly, I did not post this comment either.

      However, the comments posted by this Anonymous (whoever he/she is) are applicable to the emerging situation.

      Tomorrow, a bunch of Americans calling themselves "Democrats" (who are in reality an assortment of Marxists/Socialists/Communists) will assume almost total control of the country, to the great glee of certain foreign powers no doubt.

      On the eve of all this, I want to thank Dr. Waddy for his site, and for his optimism (past and present). I certainly take a dim view of the future, but I like to think of it as "The Power of Negative Thinking". Ha! I certainly wish him the best of luck, and sincerely hope that his site is not shut down during the coming purge of just about anything and everything conservative.

      As far as the so called Republican party is concerned, it has committed collective suicide is failing to stand up to the the bully on the block, and has for all purposes failed The American People in general, minus all the gullible fools who voted for the incoming regime.

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  4. Ray, whether Dumbo was singlehandedly responsible for our victory in WWII I couldn't say...but he is a cutie pie! Try to deny it -- I dare you!

    Anonymous (not Jack), your view is not unfounded. Many Trumpers, and others fond of liberty, will be disgusted by the pusillanimity of the GOP. I am too, at times. You're right that many will stay home in 2022. That's inevitable. Frankly, though, the same can be said of Democrats. Many of them showed up ONLY to give Trump the finger. With no more Trump in the White House, many of them will give politics a pass. Ergo, I conclude that the Republicans can and probably will make a comeback in 2022. As you say, that doesn't guarantee that the country will get back on course. Not by a long shot. That would take a sea change in our national culture and spirit. It may, frankly, require us to hit "rock bottom" as a people, before we realize just how low we've sunk.

    Ray, you are most welcome. I'm glad I can be that contrarian voice of optimism that lights your personal darkness... And I too hope I survive the ongoing purge! Fear not -- if Blogger pitches me into the dustbin of history, I will quickly redeploy to another site.

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  5. Dr.Waddy from Jack: This post is brilliant! You are our sage.

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