A Grand Old Party in Panic
Pat Buchanan's column is released twice a week.
Whittaker Chambers said that "the great failing of American conservatives is they do not retrieve their wounded."
He had it right, as Todd Akin can testify.
In an interview that aired last Sunday, Akin, the Republican candidate for Senate in Missouri, was asked whether he opposed abortions for women who had been raped. Akin's reply:
"From what I understand from
doctors, that's really rare. ... If it's a legitimate rape, the female
body has ways to try to shut that whole thing down ... .
"But let's assume that maybe that didn't work or something. I think
there should be some punishment, but the punishment ought to be on the
rapist and not attacking the child." As no rape is "legitimate," this was a colossal gaffe.
Yet anyone reading his statement
knows what Akin meant. He was saying that in an actual rape — from what
doctors have told him — the likelihood of pregnancy is rare. But if a
pregnancy did occur, the punishment should be imposed on the rapist not
the unborn child.
This was the moral position of
those extremists John Paul II and Ronald Reagan. Of more interest, then,
was the Republican reaction.
Howls for Akin to get out of the race came from pundits, talk show hosts, members of the Senate and the GOP's
monied elite that is raising hundreds of millions in hope of a sweep of
both houses of Congress and the White House in November. Akin is
henceforth not to get a dime.
Even Paul Ryan, whose position on abortion appears identical to that of Akin, called and urged him to drop out.
Who came to Akin's defense? The
Family Research Council. As President Nixon once told me, "Count your
friends when you're down."
What does this hysteria over one egregious gaffe reveal?
A deep-seated fear, a gnawing anxiety among Republicans
that the positions they have held and hold on social and moral issues,
and even on economics and foreign policy, no longer command the support
of a majority of their countrymen.
Consider. While the three amigos —
John McCain, Joe Lieberman and Lindsey Graham — are all for
intervention in Syria, the Republican Party has fallen largely silent.
Where are the Republican and neocon hawks of yesteryear now that
Barack Obama is pulling out of Afghanistan, when the expected result of a
U.S. withdrawal is a Taliban takeover and massacre of many of those
Afghans foolish enough to have cast their lot with the Americans?
Any Republicans demanding we stay the course in Afghanistan?
Rather than hearing the old paeans to free trade we used to get from Bush I and II, Republicans now talk about getting tough with China and fighting the "unfair" trade practices of foreign regimes.
Milton Friedman, whose writings Republicans
once read as gospel, said we should throw America's markets open to the
world, no matter the protectionist policies of others, because cheaper
imports benefit all of America's consumers.
No Republican talks like that anymore. Yet none seems to have a
solution to these endless trade deficits debilitating our economy other
than to ignore them or accuse the Chinese of "currency manipulation." With homosexual marriage gaining converts among the young, the party of the Moral Majority declines to stand with Chick-fil-A.
On right-to-life, see the Republicans flee from Todd Akin, who committed a gaffe while restating his support for what has been a plank of the Republican platform since 1980.
Bewailing deficits, Republicans demand a balanced budget. And the Ryan budget does that — in 28 years.
Why so long? Because real budget cuts entail real pain. Where is Mitt Romney going to slash a budget that consumes a fourth of the U.S. economy?
Not defense. Mitt promises to increase that. He cannot cut interest on the debt, which must rise as interest rates climb from today's near-zero levels. He says he will not cut Medicare.
Is he going to cut Social Security? How about taking an ax to Medicaid, food stamps, student loans, school lunches, Head Start, aid to education, Pell Grants, EPA, the FBI and the earned income tax credit?
What the reactions to Akin's
gaffe and the congressional skinny-dipper in the Sea of Galilee expose
is a fear in the soul of the GOP that history is passing it by and the end may be near.
For decades, the GOP
has been the party that cuts marginal tax rates, opposes abortion,
defends traditional marriage, sends troops to fight for our values
abroad and slashes government spending.
Today's GOP
establishment is queasy even talking about social issues and recognizes
that the new America has had it with the Afghanistans and Iraqs, wants
to raise taxes on the wealthiest 1 percent and contains scores of
millions who will punish any politician who threatens their benefits.
The GOP's
insoluble problem is that the multicultural, multiethnic and
multilingual country they created with their open borders appears not to
like the brand of dog food the party sells.
Beating up on Todd Akin is not going to change that.
Patrick J. Buchanan is the author
of "Suicide of a Superpower: Will America Survive to 2025?" To find out
more about Patrick Buchanan and read features by other Creators
Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate Web page
at www.creators.com.
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