Scrutinizing national elections is difficult because of the many complex variables: It’s a big country, filled with a great many constituencies, each of which have competing interests and priorities. But sometimes, it’s best not to overthink matters: Much of the country is struggling with high inflation and one party is in power, so the other party is likely to do well.
Indeed, CNBC released the results of its latest national poll yesterday, and it showed Republicans with big advantages on the economy, which is voters’ top issue. To be sure, the GOP hasn’t earned credibility on economic policy, and the party certainly doesn’t deserve to be taken seriously on the matter, but when the electorate is dissatisfied with the status quo, minority parties tend to benefit, whether it makes sense or not.
But what makes our current circumstances so unusual is the disconnect between the problem and the solution. As Americans feel economic unease, they’re prepared to reward a party effectively running on a platform of vastly more economic unease.
In a piece for The Bulwark this week, Jonathan V. Last wrote, “Republicans have announced that their electoral case to voters is a promise to create economic instability.”
At face value, that might seem ridiculous. Why would the GOP, poised to benefit from voters’ anxieties about the economic status quo, present an agenda that would destabilize the economy?
And yet, foolish or not, here we are.
On tax policy, Republicans talk quite a bit about inflation, but they’re also pushing for regressive tax breaks that would make inflation worse, not better. When outgoing British Prime Minister Liz Truss pushed a similar agenda, it was a disaster that cost the conservative her office. GOP leaders nevertheless seem eager to repeat her mistake.
On government shutdowns, several Republican officeholders and candidates, including a member of the Senate GOP leadership, have spent recent months saying they’re prepared to shut down government operations next year unless Democrats agree to unspecified austerity measures. This week offered more of the same.
On energy policy, Republicans have already suggested they’ll curtail U.S. support for our Ukrainian allies, as Last’s Bulwark piece added, this would “have the effect of creating more instability in energy markets as it would give Putin a lifeline to prolong his war.”








