OPINION
PAUL KRUGMAN
Why Did Republicans Become So Extreme?
June 27,
2022
Credit...Mark
Peterson/Redux
Paul
Krugman
By Paul
Krugman
Opinion
Columnist
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/06/27/opinion/republicans-extreme-abortion.html
Many
political analysts have spent years warning that the G.O.P. was becoming an
extremist, anti-democratic party.
Long before
Republicans nominated Donald Trump for president, let alone before Trump
refused to acknowledge electoral defeat, the congressional scholars Thomas Mann
and Norman Ornstein declared that the party had become “an insurgent outlier”
that rejected “facts, evidence and science” and didn’t accept the legitimacy of
political opposition.
In 2019 an
international survey of experts rated parties around the world on their
commitment to basic democratic principles and minority rights. The G.O.P., it
turns out, looks nothing like center-right parties in other Western countries.
What it resembles, instead, are authoritarian parties like Hungary’s Fidesz or
Turkey’s A.K.P.
Such analyses
have frequently been dismissed as over the top and alarmist. Even now, with
Republicans expressing open admiration for Viktor Orban’s one-party rule, I
encounter people insisting that the G.O.P. isn’t comparable to Fidesz. (Why
not? Republicans have been gerrymandering state legislatures to lock in control
no matter how badly they lose the popular vote, which is right out of Orban’s
playbook.) Yet as Edward Luce of The Financial Times recently pointed out, “at
every juncture over last 20 years the America ‘alarmists’ have been right.”
And over
the past few days we’ve received even more reminders of just how extreme
Republicans have become. The Jan. 6 hearings have been establishing, in damning
detail, that the attack on the Capitol was part of a broader scheme to overturn
the election, directed from the top. A Republican-stuffed Supreme Court has
been handing down nakedly partisan rulings on abortion and gun control. And
there may be more shocks to come — keep your eyes on what the court is likely
to do to the government’s ability to protect the environment.
The
question that has been bothering me — aside from the question of whether
American democracy will survive — is why. Where is this extremism coming from?
Comparisons
with the rise of fascism in Europe between the wars are inevitable but not all
that helpful. For one thing, bad as he was, Trump wasn’t another Hitler or even
another Mussolini. True, Republicans like Marco Rubio routinely call Democrats
— who are basically standard social democrats — Marxists, and it’s tempting to
match their hyperbole. The reality, however, is bad enough to not need
exaggeration.
And there’s
another problem with comparisons to the rise of fascism. Right-wing extremism
in interwar Europe arose from the rubble of national catastrophes: defeat in
World War I — or, in the case of Italy, Pyrrhic victory that felt like defeat;
hyperinflation; depression.
Nothing
like that has happened here. Yes, we had a severe financial crisis in 2008,
followed by a sluggish recovery. Yes, we’ve been seeing regional economic
divergence, with some ugly consequences — unemployment, social decline, even
suicides and addiction — in the regions left behind. But America has been
through much worse in the past, without seeing one of its major parties turn
its back on democracy.
Also, the
Republican turn toward extremism began during the 1990s. Many people, I
believe, have forgotten the political craziness of the Clinton years — the
witch hunts and wild conspiracy theories (Hillary murdered Vince Foster!), the
attempts to blackmail Bill Clinton into policy concessions by shutting down the
government, and more. And all of this was happening during what were widely
regarded as good years, with most Americans believing that the country was on
the right track.
It’s a
puzzle. I’ve been spending a lot of time lately looking for historical precursors
— cases in which right-wing extremism rose even in the face of peace and
prosperity. And I think I’ve found one: the rise of the Ku Klux Klan in the
1920s.
It’s
important to realize that while this organization took the name of the
post-Civil War group, it was actually a new movement — a white nationalist
movement to be sure, but far more widely accepted, and less of a pure terrorist
organization. And it reached the height of its power — it effectively
controlled several states — amid peace and an economic boom.
What was
this new K.K.K. about? I’ve been reading Linda Gordon’s “The Second Coming of
the K.K.K.: The Ku Klux Klan of the 1920s and the American Political
Tradition,” which portrays a “politics of resentment” driven by the backlash of
white, rural and small-town Americans against a changing nation. The K.K.K.
hated immigrants and “urban elites”; it was characterized by “suspicion of
science” and “a larger anti-intellectualism.” Sound familiar?
OK, the
modern G.O.P. isn’t as bad as the second K.K.K. But Republican extremism
clearly draws much of its energy from the same sources.
And because
G.O.P. extremism is fed by resentment against the very things that, as I see
it, truly make America great — our diversity, our tolerance for difference — it
cannot be appeased or compromised with. It can only be defeated.
Paul
Krugman has been an Opinion columnist since 2000 and is also a distinguished
professor at the City University of New York Graduate Center. He won the 2008
Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences for his work on international trade
and economic geography. @PaulKrugman
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