Sen. Rob Portman (R-Ohio) told ABC News yesterday morning that the Republican Party’s “policies” are “even more popular” than Donald Trump, which is why the GOP “did pretty well” while losing control of Congress and the White House. He didn’t appear to be kidding.
In the same interview, the retiring Ohio senator added that “most people are supportive” of the Republican Party’s agenda. Around the same time, Sen. Bill Cassidy (R-La.) appeared on CNN and made similar comments, insisting that the party’s future is bright because “our policies are great.”
It’s as if the GOP became a post-policy party, and some of its members failed to notice.
Not surprisingly, since I wrote a book about the Republican Party abandoning its role as a governing party, giving up on taking policymaking and problem-solving seriously, Portman’s and Cassidy’s comments stood out for me. Indeed, it was almost amusing to hear the prominent GOP senators talking up their party’s agenda six months after the Republican Party decided not to even bother writing a platform — a first since 1854.
But just as important was the timing: as Portman and Cassidy stressed the importance of their party’s policies, the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) was unfolding, leaving little doubt that Republicans don’t really have any policies. As the New York Times noted:
CPAC in past years has served, at minimum, as a forum for conservatives to unite in opposition to a Democratic policy agenda. But most speakers over the weekend won applause by channeling the preoccupation with personality over policy that animated the party during Mr. Trump’s presidency. The result was an event in which conservatives signaled their lack of interest not just in mobilizing against Mr. Biden’s policies, but also in debating the finer points of their own.
Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) even chided those who prefer to “sit around and have academic debates about conservative policy” — as if such substantive discussions are unworthy of policymakers’ time.








