I read a lot of posts indicating that the Republican Party is at death's door. While that idea appeals to all of us, I'm afraid it's merely wishful thinking. Or premature, at least. Republicans continue to have a great deal of power throughout this country, and a tyranny of the minority system favors the GOP. With continued urbanization (i.e., concentration of liberals), an increasingly large percentage of the US population lives in an increasingly small percentage of states. The principle of "one person, one vote" is lacking. The US Senate is the embodiment of that lack. Even in 2020, taking control of the Senate will be a tall order. I'm hopeful we'll win the White House, and a 50-50 Senate would essentially give us a majority. But the fact of the matter is there are more than 20 states that remain deep red and where winning a Senate seat is not in the offing. This is also why the days of a presidential candidate winning 400+ electoral votes are long gone. Obama's 365 in 2008 is, for now, the best we can realistically hope for. I'm pretty bullish on us getting in that ballpark in 2020. With, say, a Harris-O'Rourke ticket, I see us winning back MI, PA and WI, while possibly picking up NC, FL, AZ and GA (3 states that Obama won in 2008 that I'm not so optimistic about are IN, IA and OH, though I wouldn't count out the latter).
Curtailing gerrymandering and voter suppression would certainly help our chances of maintaining a majority in the US House, though the aforementioned concentration of liberals presents some challenges in terms of drawing fair district boundaries. And I can see us getting to a point where it won't be possible for a Republican presidential candidate to reach 270 electoral votes without that party making some significant changes. But I think it's a stretch to say that's imminent, and not being able to win the presidency wouldn't necessarily spell the end of the Republican Party.
The forecasted demise seems to be predicated upon the notion that Trump has taken over the Republican Party and will bring it crashing down. But Trump is part of a continuum. He's a symptom. The rise of Trump didn't happen in a vacuum (anti-Trump Republicans may like to think otherwise, possibly to assuage their guilt over knowing they helped create today's Republican Party base). Trump's the almost inevitable result of 50 years of increasingly cruel and unhinged rhetoric and policy. As Obama said back during the 2016 campaign, the GOP has "been feeding their base all kinds of crazy for years." Decades, in fact. There was the white backlash to the Civil Rights Movement, the realignment of the party membership and Nixon's Southern Strategy in the 1960s. There was the Powell Memo and birth of the Moral Majority in the 1970s. There was Reagan's dog whistling in the 1980s (let's remember his 1980 campaign chose to kick things off with a speech on "states' rights" less than 10 miles from where 3 civil rights workers were murdered in Mississippi. The dog whistle has become a bullhorn in the tiny hands of Donald Trump, but it's wrong to suggest there is a demarcation between the pre-Trump Republican Party and what we're experiencing today. Again, Trump is part of a continuum and the anti-Trump Republicans were complicit in making him possible.
Trump bragged openly about sexual assault, kidnapped children, can't form a coherent sentence - making George W. Bush seem articulate by comparison - and he's plagued by scandals (to put it mildly), yet he's been able to maintain a 40% approval rating. 40% is not good by any means, but his rating has been far steadier than any of his predecessors in spite of being the definition of atrocious. We shouldn't dismiss the possibility that a much more intelligent, politically-savvy and charismatic demagogue will come along. At this time, it's not at all clear that such a person wouldn't garner enough support to put Republicans back in the driver's seat. We better be ready, rather than convinced the Republican Party is dead man walking.
In the immediate term (2020) and in the long run, the smart money's on the Democratic Party outlasting the Republican Party (especially if we find a way to drastically boost turnout). Rather, I should say that the smart money's on demographic shifts and social evolution favoring Democratic Party principles and forcing the Republican Party to change or be replaced. But there may be an extended intermediate period during which the Republican Party is able to hold onto power throughout much of the US. We must continue to educate, inspire, boost turnout and be vigilant.
Then again, maybe climate change will make all of this moot.
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