Trump losing won’t solve the whole problem

Created
Thu, 13/04/2023 - 09:30
Updated
Thu, 13/04/2023 - 09:30
Thomas Edsall has a long piece on the radicalization of the GOP. This is the point most people don;t want to admit:  Theda Skocpol, a professor of political science and sociology at Harvard, contended that many of the developments in states controlled by Republicans are a result of careful, long-term planning by conservative strategists, particularly those in the Federalist Society, who are developing tools to build what she called “minority authoritarianism” within the context of a nominally democratic system of government. Skocpol outlined her thinking in an email: These organized, richly resourced actors, she wrote, Skocpol did not pull her punches: There are a number of factors that confirm Skocpol’s analysis. First and foremost, the Republican Party’s commitment to democratic values and procedures has been steadily eroding over the past two decades — and the momentum has accelerated. The brakes on extremism are failing, with Donald Trump gaining strength in his bid for renomination and the continuing shift to the right in states like Tennessee and Ohio. Second, in bright-red states, the embrace of far-right positions on such issues as abortion, guns, immigration and election denial is now a requirement rather than a choice for candidates seeking office. At the same time, in purple states like Arizona and Pennsylvania, a hard-right posture may be a liability in the general election, even as it is often mandatory in a primary contest. The 2024 presidential election, if it is close, will test the viability of a mainstay of Republicans’ current antidemocratic strategy:…