Michael Tomasky: The GOP Brings Politics to a Crisis Point
With their refusal to vote for Boehner’s Plan B, Republicans have definitively shown that they’d rather sabotage democracy than govern. How can they be stopped?
Really, what is to be done about this Republican Party?
What force can change it—can stop Republicans from being ideological
saboteurs and convert at least a workable minority of them into people
interested in governing rather than sabotage? With the failed Plan B
vote, we have reached the undeniable crisis point. Actually we’ve been
at a crisis point for years, but this is really the all-upper-case
Undeniable Crisis Point. They are a direct threat to the economy, which
could slip back into recession next year if the government doesn’t,
well, govern. They are an ongoing, at this point almost mundane, threat
to democracy, subverting and preventing progress the American people
clearly desire across a number of fronts. They have to be stopped, and
the only people who can really stop them are corporate titans and Wall Streeters, who surely now are finally beginning to see that America’s
problem is not Barack Obama
and his alleged “socialism,” but a political party that has become
psychologically incapable of operating within the American political system.
We
all know that the GOP has become much more extreme in the last few
years, and, taking the longer historical view, the last 20 or 25 years.
But when that gets said, it usually elides an important point—the
important point. It’s usually meant to refer to the party’s policy
positions. And the move to the hard right is obviously true along those
lines.Read the full story here.
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