OPINION
THE
EDITORIAL BOARD
How a Faction of the Republican Party Enables
Political Violence
Nov. 26,
2022
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/11/26/opinion/republican-party-extremism.html
By The
Editorial Board
The
editorial board is a group of opinion journalists whose views are informed by
expertise, research, debate and certain longstanding values. It is separate
from the newsroom.
This
editorial is the fourth in a series, The Danger Within, urging readers to
understand the danger of extremist violence — and offering possible solutions.
Read more about the series in a note from Kathleen Kingsbury, the Times Opinion
editor.
On Oct. 12,
2018, a crowd of Proud Boys arrived at the Metropolitan Republican Club in
Manhattan. They had come to the Upper East Side club from around the country
for a speech by the group’s founder, Gavin McInnes. It was a high point for the
Proud Boys — which until that point had been known best as an all-male
right-wing street-fighting group — in their embrace by mainstream politics.
The
Metropolitan Republican Club is an emblem of the Republican establishment. It
was founded in 1902 by supporters of Theodore Roosevelt, and it’s where New
York City Republicans such as Fiorello La Guardia and Rudy Giuliani announced
their campaigns. But the presidency of Donald Trump whipped a faction of the
Metropolitan Republican Club into “an ecstatic frenzy,” said John William
Schiffbauer, a Republican consultant who used to work for the state G.O.P. on
the second floor of the club.
The McInnes
invitation was controversial, even before a group of Proud Boys left the
building and violently confronted protesters who had gathered outside. Two of
the Proud Boys were later convicted of attempted assault and riot and given
four years in prison. The judge who sentenced them explained the relatively
long prison term: “I know enough about history to know what happened in Europe
in the ’30s when political street brawls were allowed to go ahead without any
type of check from the criminal justice system,” he said. Seven others pleaded
guilty in the episode.
And yet
Republicans at the New York club have not distanced themselves from the Proud
Boys. Soon after the incident, a candidate named Ian Reilly, who, former club
members say, had a lead role in planning the speech, won the next club
presidency. He did so in part by recruiting followers of far-right figures,
such as Milo Yiannopoulos, to pack the club’s ranks at the last minute. A
similar group of men repeated the strategy at the New York Young Republicans
Club, filling it with far-right members, too.
Many
moderate Republicans have quit the clubs in disgust. Looking back, Mr.
Schiffbauer said, Oct. 12, 2018, was a “proto” Jan. 6.
In
conflicts like this one — not all of
them played out so publicly — there is a fight underway for the soul of the
Republican Party. On one side are Mr. Trump and his followers, including
extremist groups like the Proud Boys and the Oath Keepers. On the other side
stand those in the party who remain committed to the principle that politics,
even the most contentious politics, must operate within the constraints of
peaceful democracy. It is vital that this pro-democracy faction win out over
the extremists and push the fringes back to the fringes.
It has
happened before. The Republican Party successfully drove the paranoid extremists
of the John Birch Society out of public life in the 1960s. Party leaders could
do so again for the current crop of conspiracy peddlers. Voters may do it for
them, as they did in so many races in this year’s midterm elections. But this
internal Republican Party struggle is important for reasons far greater than
the tally in a win/loss column. A healthy democracy requires both political
parties to be fully committed to the rule of law and not to entertain or even
tacitly encourage violence or violent speech. A large faction of one party in
our country fails that test, and that has consequences for all of us.
Extremist
violence is the country’s top domestic terrorist threat, according to a
three-year investigation by the Democratic staff members of the Senate
Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs, which reported its
findings last week. “Over the past two decades, acts of domestic terrorism have
dramatically increased,” the committee said in its report. “National security
agencies now identify domestic terrorism as the most persistent and lethal
terrorist threat to the homeland. This increase in domestic terror attacks has
been predominantly perpetrated by white supremacist and anti-government
extremist individuals and groups.” While there have been recent episodes of
violent left-wing extremism, for the past few years, political violence has
come primarily from the right.
This year
has been marked by several high-profile acts of political violence: an
attempted break-in at an F.B.I. office in Ohio; the attack on Paul Pelosi, the
husband of the speaker of the House; the mass shooting at a supermarket in
Buffalo by a white supremacist; an armed threat against Justice Brett
Kavanaugh; a foiled plan to attack a synagogue in New York.
It is
impossible to fully untangle the relationship between conspiracy theories and
violence. But what Americans do know should sound alarms: A survey this year
found that some 18 million Americans believe that the 2020 election was stolen
from Donald Trump and that force is justified to return him to power. Of those
18 million, eight million own guns, and one million either belong to a
paramilitary group or know someone who does. That’s alarming because violent
people who belong to communities, online or offline, where violence is widely
accepted are more likely to act. A portion of the G.O.P. has become such a
community.
The full
extent of this violence is not well documented. The Senate committee’s damning
report concluded that the federal government, specifically the F.B.I. and the
Department of Homeland Security, has “failed to systematically track and report
data on domestic terrorism as required by federal law, has not appropriately
allocated its resources to match the current threat and has not aligned its
definitions to make its investigations consistent and its actions proportional
to the threat of domestic terrorism.” Those shortcomings need to be urgently
remedied.
Beyond the
obvious need for better data on extremist violence, preventing or stopping the
spread of extremism is complicated, although there are some important, concrete
steps that can be taken. This board has argued for stronger enforcement of
state anti-militia laws, closer monitoring of extremists in law enforcement and
the military, and better international cooperation to tackle this transnational
issue. Social media companies need to develop new tools to keep extremist
material off their platforms and adjust their algorithms so users aren’t
exposed to ever more extreme content.
Yet one of
the most effective ways to deter political violence is to make it unacceptable
in public life. To do that, all political leaders have an important role to
play. In a speech in September, President Biden did his part, when he
identified the threat that the dominance of specifically “MAGA Republicans”
poses not just to the Democratic Party but to the entire country. “They promote
authoritarian leaders, and they fan the flames of political violence that are a
threat to our personal rights, to the pursuit of justice, to the rule of law,
to the very soul of this country,” Mr. Biden said.
A couple of
months after that speech, Americans voted in midterm elections in which
hundreds of “MAGA Republicans” who had enthusiastically spread extremist
statements, lies and conspiracy theories ran for local, state and federal
offices. Voters rejected many of them, and while that is encouraging, elections
alone are not enough.
The
campaign season was marked by numerous incidents in which many Republicans used
speech that has been linked to violence. They depicted gay and transgender
people as “groomers”; they helped spread the racist so-called great replacement
theory that has inspired numerous mass shootings; they promoted the QAnon
conspiracy theory, not to mention ubiquitous lies about fraud and the 2020
election, which led to the Jan. 6 attack.
Despite
voters’ repudiation of many of his acolytes, Mr. Trump has announced his return
to the campaign trail, a move that promises to dial up the enthusiasm of his
most devoted adherents. They include, of course, members of the Proud Boys.
During a debate during the 2020 campaign, Mr. Trump refused to disavow them or
their movement and instead told them to “stand back and stand by.” And so they
did until Jan. 6.
Mr. Trump’s
reinstatement on Twitter means not only further proliferation of “degrading and
dehumanizing discourse,” as Brian L. Ott, an author of “The Twitter Presidency:
Donald J. Trump and the Politics of White Rage,” warned in these pages a few
days ago, but also a greater likelihood of violence. As Mr. Ott explains:
“Social media generally and Twitter specifically lend themselves to simple,
urgent, unreflective and emotionally charged communication. When the message is
one of intolerance and violence, the result is all but certain.”
Leaders in
politics, law enforcement, the media and elsewhere have an obligation to do
everything they can to remove from public life those who participate in or
endorse political violence.
The onus
falls on Republicans. While voters this month rejected some of the most extreme
candidates, the party is still very much under the spell of Mr. Trump and his
brand of authoritarianism. Two prominent Republicans who have been outspoken
about right-wing extremism and baseless lies, Representatives Liz Cheney and
Adam Kinzinger, have been driven out of office. Meanwhile, the spread of
conspiracy theories that have already inspired violence continues unabated from
politicians and conservative media.
Even if Mr.
Trump doesn’t become the party’s nominee for president, the party and many of
its supporters seem to have convinced themselves that the spread of extremism
in service of their causes is not an urgent concern. Those who can influence
the direction of the party — its voters and its biggest donors and supporters —
must do everything they can to convince them otherwise. American democracy
depends on it.
Democrats,
too, have a role to play. They should not spend money on far-right fringe
candidates in the primaries with the hopes of beating them in general
elections. To do so only further pollutes the public square, even if it can
lead to Democratic victories, as it apparently did this year. Rather than
giving in to the temptation to tar the entire party with the actions of its
worst members, Democrats should continue to find opportunities for
bipartisanship whenever possible.
The
alternative is allowing extremism to run rampant until the degradation of
American politics is complete.
A scene in
Roanoke, Texas, this summer gave a chilling preview of what that future might
look like if violence from the right begets violence from the left, in a
country deeply divided and with far more guns than people. A group of armed
right-wing demonstrators turned up to protest a drag queen brunch only to find
another group of people, dressed in black and holding military-style rifles.
The second group called themselves the Elm Fork John Brown Gun Club and
reportedly took it upon themselves to provide security for the event. The local
police separated the two groups and made no arrests, but this kind of
confrontation is not a sign of healthy democratic debate.
Political
disagreement need not include the menace of violence. Americans, and their
political leaders, have the ability to choose a different future.
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