A new poll by the Pew Research Center suggests that the Republican rank and file have begun to grasp that their party is in serious trouble. Fully 67% of Republican and Republican-leaning voters agree that the GOP “needs to address major problems” in the party; 59% agree that the GOP “needs to reconsider some positions.” A separate poll last week (released by Democrats James Carville and Stanley Greenberg) found Democrats to be, on average, 8% more satisfied with their own party than Republicans are with theirs.This desire for renewal is bubbling up at a time when Republican leaders are behaving like extremists—for instance, by voting 39 times in the Republican-controlled House to repeal Obamacare. (A 40th vote may occur later this week.) If the first step toward rehabilitation is recognizing that you have a problem, then the GOP rank and file seem to be doing exactly that.What’s surprising is how these Republicans and Republican-leaners propose fixing the problem. A 54% majority think the party should move “in a more conservative direction,” as against 40% who favor moving “in a more moderate direction” and 5% who are either satisfied with the current direction or don’t have an opinion.Only 27% think Republicans in Congress haven’t compromised enough with Democrats: 67% are either fine with the GOP’s obstructionism in Congress or desire more of it. Indeed, this last category represents a narrow plurality (35%).
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