Based on the results of the 2012
election, one thing is becoming increasingly clear. The Grand Old Party (GOP)
is exactly that: OLD. Last night’s
election of the first openly gay senator as well as passage of same-sex
marriage by popular vote in two states and the legalization of marijuana in two
states signals that social norms in this country are changing—and changing
fast. Just eight years after Rick
Santorum, former Republican Senator from Pennsylvania ,
and President George W. Bush turned same-sex marriage into a divisive national
social issue, and just four years after California
passed Proposition 8, voters have turned out and turned policy around. This is the progress many liberals and more
moderately inclined Americans have hoped for, but this is not the kind of
progress that should be linked solely to the campaigns and policies of Democratic
or Independent officials.
If Mitt
Romney hadn’t come out so staunchly against immigration or against things like
abortion and same-sex marriage, he probably would have won this election. CNN’s protestations to the contrary, the
media’s description of Obama’s victory as “decisive” is overstated. His lead in the popular vote is narrow and, even
with Florida
under his belt, he still wins with less electoral votes than he did with four
years ago. The candidates and analysts
alike maintained that economy was a central focus in this campaign, but the
discourse to which I was a party to over the last several months heavily
focused on social policy such as overturning the Defense of Marriage Act and
making sure that the next President does not appoint ultraconservative Justices
to the Supreme Court. For many, it
seems, considerations of the next four years took a backseat to considerations
about the next thirty years.
Amid this
climate, Republican candidates stated that children born from legitimate rape were part of God’s plan for women and continued to run on platforms that would illegalize
abortion and treat gays as second-class citizens. Romney, who was considered to be fairly
moderate as the governor of Massachusetts ,
moved further to the right and yet didn’t seem to produce a solid position
point on very much. This is where the
Grand Old Party clearly failed. Long
ago, the GOP may have been captured by conservative Christian elements, but the
time has come to start moving beyond that increasingly smaller base and embrace
a larger, evolving demographic. Republicans need to offer the country a truly different direction, one
that focuses on government and economic policy and does not alienate minorities
and strip people of all walks of life of their basic human dignity. It’s time for the Rick Santorums, Sarah
Palins, and Michelle Bachmanns of the party to adopt a more moderate platform,
or step aside entirely. Note that
Santorum was voted out of his senate seat, lost the Republican primary, and
that Bachmann won reelection by a sizably narrow margin. As many news media stations pointed out last
night and early this morning, relying on old white men to vote them into power
as in years and decades past, representatives of the Grand Old Party fumbled
big time.
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A divided America showcasing changing demographics - NYT.com |
I implore
Republicans, or independents who supported Romney, to spend the next four years
working within the Grand Old Party to help begin the process of
reformation. I respect the Republican
Party for having differing economic policy goals than the Democrats. Our democracy is strong when opposing
viewpoints are explored, debated, and consistently refined to form a more
perfect union. However, we must be
careful not to be so opposed to one another as to keep dividing the country and
continue holding presidential elections in which we feel that we’re merely choosing
the lesser of two evils.* Parties should have
enough opposing viewpoints to make their existence meaningful, and to make
their disagreements engines of change and progress. However, a party cannot be so out-of-touch
with the general population that it renders its existence distracting—maybe
even annoying—but essentially useless.
This is what seems to be happening to the Republicans. Refocusing the Grand Old Party on its core
beliefs—small government, lower taxes, and greater opportunities for generating
wealth through private entrepreneurship without getting entangled in outdated
social policies—will restore the Republican Party to a position of import and
respect. Alternatively, leaving the
party in the hands of extremists weakens the party further and hurts the
country that we all—Democrats, Independents, and Republicans alike—love.
*The 2008 election was not a choice between the lesser of two evils, as both parties ran history making candidates and offered meaningful discussions of change, hope and a strong direction for the country. However, this presidential race felt like a return to the Bush/Kerry election cycle. Judging by the numbers by which Obama won reelection as well as media analysis about independent voters, it seems that many voters were not particularly strongly enthused by either candidate.
*The 2008 election was not a choice between the lesser of two evils, as both parties ran history making candidates and offered meaningful discussions of change, hope and a strong direction for the country. However, this presidential race felt like a return to the Bush/Kerry election cycle. Judging by the numbers by which Obama won reelection as well as media analysis about independent voters, it seems that many voters were not particularly strongly enthused by either candidate.
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