Sunday, May 10, 2015 05:00 AM CST
This is how the right wing dies: The GOP has
rigged the game for the rich, again
Reactionaries have a hammerlock on power,
now. Last time GOP rewrote rules for the 1 percent, trust-busters
emerged
Heather Cox Richardson
If the past is any guide, a new, progressive Republican Party is taking shape.
We
just can’t see it yet. For now, the party still seems glued to the
Movement Conservative idea, rooted in a long-standing ideology that
business can do little or nothing wrong, that promoting the economic
well-being of a few wealthy men will advance American society as a
whole. Those few leaders are the “makers,” Paul Ryan explained in 2010;
the majority of Americans are “takers.” The more it becomes evident that
the “trickle down” theory of wealth has not worked– that rather than
trickling down, wealth has rushed upward since 1980– the more leading
Republicans insist that the problem is not their theory. The problem,
they say, is that it has not been adopted fully enough.
One
Republican presidential hopeful after another promises to push for the
full implementation of Movement Conservative economic ideology. They all
back continued corporate tax cuts and the social spending reductions
those cuts require. Rick Perry has
already touted
the “unparalleled prosperity” he brought to Texas and dismisses the
fact that that prosperity has mostly gone to the wealthy and benefited
from federal help. Darrell Issa, whose personal wealth approaches $450
million, explains that
America’s poor are “the envy of the world.”
It
looks like Movement Conservative Republicans have a lock on the party
and, for the moment, Congress. Americans have soured on supply-side
economics, but that hasn’t changed who runs the country. When opponents
demand economic fairness, Republicans respond by accusing them of being
anti-American “Liberals” or minorities looking for a handout. When
rhetoric isn’t enough, Republicans gerrymand districts and manipulate
the electorate to stay in power even without a popular majority. When it
could have limited the power of the wealthy to control the government, a
Republican Supreme Court threw its weight behind the idea that limiting
the flow of cash into elections and political debates would infringe on
the rights of wealthy individuals.
Is the game so rigged it’s over?
It wasn’t in the 1880s, when the country was in
the same position. Just the opposite: It was the reactionary Republican
Party’s monopoly on the government that led to the rise of the
Progressive Republicans.
The Republican Party formed in the 1850s
to reclaim the government from the wealthy slave owners who controlled
the country. Members of the fledgling party created national taxation
and passed legislation to give every hardworking man land and an
education to make it possible for every one to rise—a believe that
undergirded the party’s opposition to the spread of slavery. After the
Civil War, the Republican Party’s focus on widespread economic growth
transformed into protection for the nation’s burgeoning industries. By
1880, Republicans insisted that nurturing business was the key to a
healthy economy, for the wealth that industrialists produced would
trickle down to workers and farmers. Those who complained that the
system was unfair were lazy or improvident; they had “extravagant
notions” and wanted the government to take care of them.
Not all
Americans agreed. By 1884, even the staunchly Republican Chicago Tribune
complained, “Behind every one of half of the portly and well-dressed
members of the Senate can be seen the outlines of some corporation
interested in getting or preventing legislation.” The Senate, Harper’s
Weekly agreed, was “a club of rich men.” It included a man worth a cool
$30 million, equivalent to more than $1 billion in the twenty-first
century.
Americans disgusted that the government appeared to be up
for sale to big business rebelled. In 1884, they elected a Democrat to
the White House. Grover Cleveland promised to clean up the system by
which rich men bought laws. He promised to return fairness to the
government.
When voters put a Democrat into the White House, big
business Republicans panicked. Immediately they launched a campaign to
convince voters that Republican pro-business policies were the only ones
that would keep the economy healthy. When a leading Republican hinted
he might be willing to compromise with Democrats on key legislation,
party kingmakers bypassed him for the presidential nomination in 1888
and instead gave the nod to the unremarkable Benjamin Harrison, who
promised to do as he was told.
The election was remarkably
corrupt. Republicans launched a new system of campaign financing that
tied businessmen all over the country to the party war chest, warning
them that the reelection of Cleveland would destroy the economy.
Republicans took the House and Senate in 1888. Harrison lost the popular
vote by about 100,000 votes, but his managers swung the Electoral
College behind him. When the pious Harrison commented that Providence
had given them victory, a key operative grumbled “Providence hadn’t a
damn thing to do with it. [A] number of men were compelled to approach
the penitentiary to make him President.”
Once in power, Harrison’s
men set out to make sure Democrats could never again threaten
Republican legislation. They bought a leading newspaper, Frank Leslie’s
Illustrated, and installed the president’s son as editor, using the
formerly moderate organ as an administration mouthpiece. They admitted
six new states to the Union in a year to game the electoral system.
North Dakota, South Dakota, Washington, Montana, Wyoming, and Idaho each
brought the Republicans two Senate seats, as well as extra votes in the
Electoral College. Republicans also tried to guarantee that party
officials could oversee all elections in contested districts, although
this measure raised such hackles even within the party that it didn’t
pass. Nonetheless, Harrison’s men were convinced they had swung the
government their way for the foreseeable future.
They were wrong.
While they had made it hard for Democrats to press their policies
successfully, Old Guard Republicans had created the space for a
rebellion within their own party. Younger men looked at the inequality
around them and insisted that this was not the America promised in the
Declaration of Independence. They looked at men, women and children
working in sweatshops and on shop floors with little hope of rising, and
wondered what had happened to the idea of economic and social mobility.
They looked at a political system in which the will of the majority
couldn’t override the money of the few. And they began, quietly, to push
for reform.
In the crisis year of 1884, when many disgruntled
Republicans jumped ship and backed Cleveland, Theodore Roosevelt, Henry
Cabot Lodge, Robert “Fighting Bob” La Follette and Albert Beveridge
stayed in the party. From within, they began to advocate the end of
reactionary support for big business against the rest of the nation.
They recalled the vision of Abraham Lincoln and insisted that America
was not a zero-sum game in which rich and poor fought over limited
resources. If the government regulated the abuses of the industrial
system, promoted education, and kept the economic playing field level,
it would create a prospering society in which every individual could
rise. Restoring fairness to America would restore American greatness.
In
1884, Old Guard Republicans laughed at the young reformers who, they
chuckled, applauded “with the tips of their fingers, held immediately in
front of their noses.” But they weren’t laughing in 1900, when Lodge
and Beveridge were senators, Roosevelt was governor of New York, La
Follette was governor of Wisconsin, and the latter two were turning
their states into laboratories for government regulation.
The
election of a Democrat in 1884 had convinced the younger men that the
old party was out of step with modern America. While their elders rode
their ideology into caricature, the younger men remade the Republican
Party and brought the nation into a new era. Today’s younger Republicans
may not be ready to follow in the footsteps of those progressives, but
the bigger question is whether they are willing and able.
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