The Republican Party has given us great moderate leaders: Abraham Lincoln, Teddy Roosevelt, Dwight Eisenhower. It’s given us flawed leaders who were nonetheless great Americans. I think of Ulysses S. Grant, of Thaddeus Stevens, who won the Civil War and was a true believer in reconstruction.
I don’t know where the tradition I’ve just described broke off and this new thing took over. I think it was the passage of the Civil Rights bill in 1964 – when the enemies of civil rights flipped from the party of Jefferson to the party of Strom Thurmond. Or maybe it was the Supreme Court ruling banning prayer in public school.
But what we have today is different, deeply different from the party that fought slavery and championed conservation.
I listen to Palin and Gingrich and Bachman and Huckabee and what they believe. I listen to Romney and Pawlenty and now Trump trying to talk their language and I think we’re talking something very different than mainstream Republicanism – the kind that has long won in the independent, moderate suburbs, won with the people I grew up with, with my family actually.
Palin talks like thinking isn’t necessary; it may not even be good for people. Gingrich uses his mind to say truly hateful things. Huckabee is a theocrat, someone whose statements about the Mideast are downright incendiary. Mitt Romney knows better. So does Pawlenty. I’d hate to see Haley Barbour start dueling in these woods. He might be smart enough to beat these folks at their own game.








