In Sen. Jeff Flake’s (R-Ariz.) new book, he reflects on many in his party losing sight of their core principles, largely out of cowardice. “We forgot to affirm in a voice loud and clear that yes, we are proud Republicans, but that we believe in country before party,” Flake argues. “We forgot to do that. We were afraid to do that.”
On “Meet the Press” yesterday, NBC News’ Chuck Todd asked the Arizona Republican yesterday if his party and the conservative movement are still afraid. Flake responded:
“Well, I do think that we’ve seen more people ready to stand up. And I wish that we, as a party, would have stood up, for example, when the birtherism thing was going along.
“A lot of people did stand up, but not enough…. That was particularly ugly.”
Asked if he believes he did enough, Flake added, “On that, I think I did.”
There are a few ways to look at this. At face value, Flake’s correct: much of his party’s base embraced a racist conspiracy theory, and many Republican leaders kept their mouths shut, afraid to anger right-wing activists and conservative media. This allowed a toxicity to spread throughout GOP politics, and now Donald Trump, whose sole contribution to American politics was championing that racist conspiracy theory, is the president of the United States.
As for whether Flake did his part to stand up to the garbage, it’s probably fair to say his record is mixed.
But just as important is the fact that it’s probably a mistake to perceive this as an ugly stain on Republican politics from the Obama era — because the truth is the problem hasn’t disappeared; it’s evolved.









