Let’s face it, the gun issue has its own unique dynamic, which is that the people who oppose gun limits vote on this issue while the people who support them do not.
David Brooks writes in The New York Times:
Liberals are furious, but the gun issue will not significantly damage the Republican Party. Sure, it looks bad to oppose background checks, which have overwhelming popular support. Sure, the Republican position will further taint the party’s image in places like the suburbs of Philadelphia and Northern Virginia. Sure, the party looks extreme when it can’t accept a bill sponsored by the conservative Senator Joe Manchin and the very conservative Senator Pat Toomey.
Liberals are furious, but the gun issue will not significantly damage the Republican Party. Sure, it looks bad to oppose background checks, which have overwhelming popular support. Sure, the Republican position will further taint the party’s image in places like the suburbs of Philadelphia and Northern Virginia. Sure, the party looks extreme when it can’t accept a bill sponsored by the conservative Senator Joe Manchin and the very conservative Senator Pat Toomey.
But, let’s face it, the gun issue has its own unique
dynamic, which is that the people who oppose gun limits vote on this issue while
the people who support them do not.
Moreover, Democrats never made a compelling case that
the bill would have been effective, that it would have directly prevented future
Sandy Hooks or lowered the murder rate nationwide. Even many of the bill’s
supporters were lukewarm about its contents.
The main reason the gun issue won’t significantly harm
Republicans is that it doesn’t play into the core debate that will shape the
future of the party. The issue that does that is immigration. The near-term
future of American politics will be determined by who wins the immigration
debate.
In the months since the election, a rift has opened
between the Republicans you might call first-wave revolutionaries and those you
might call second-wave revolutionaries. The first-wave revolutionaries (the
party’s Congressional leaders) think of themselves as very conservative. They
ejected the remaining moderates from their ranks. They sympathize with the Tea
Party. They are loyal to Fox News and support a radical restructuring of the
government.
These first-wave revolutionaries haven’t softened
their conservatism, but they are trying to adjust it to win majority support.
They are trying to find policies to boost social mobility, so Republicans look
less like the party of the rich. They are swinging behind immigration reform,
believing that Hispanics won’t even listen to Republicans until they put that
issue in the rearview mirror.
The second-wave revolutionaries — like Rand Paul (on
some issues), Jim DeMint, Ted Cruz and some of the cutting-edge talk radio jocks
— see the first-wave revolutionaries as a bunch of incompetent
establishmentarians. They speak of the Bush-Cheney administration as if it were
some sort of liberal Republican regime run by Nelson Rockefeller and Jacob
Javits. They argue that Republicans have lost elections recently because the
party has been led by big-spending, mushy moderates like John McCain and Mitt
Romney and managed by out-of-touch elitists like Karl Rove and Reince Priebus.
The second wavers are much more tactically aggressive,
favoring filibusters and such when possible. What the party needs now, they
argue, is an ultra-Goldwaterite insurgency that topples the “establishment,”
ditches immigration reform and wins Hispanic votes by appealing to the
evangelicals among them and offering them economic liberty.
The first and second wavers are just beginning their
immigration clash. A few weeks ago, I would have thought the pro-immigration
forces had gigantic advantages, but now it is hard to be sure.
The immigration fight will be pitting a cohesive
insurgent opposition force against a fragile coalition of bipartisan proponents
who have to ambivalently defend a sprawling piece of compromise legislation.
We’ve seen this kind of fight before. Things usually don’t end up well for the
proponents.
Whether it’s guns or immigration, it is easy to
imagine that the underlying political landscape, which prevented progress in the
past, has changed. But when you actually try to pass something, you often
discover the underlying landscape has not changed. The immigration fight of 2013
might bear an eerie similarity to the fight of 2007.
The arguments that might persuade Republicans to
support immigration reform are all on the table. They came on election night
2012. The arguments against are only just now unfolding.
It is just a fact that the big short-term
beneficiaries of this law are not generally Republicans: the 11 million who are
living in the shadows; the high-tech entrepreneurs who will get more skilled
labor. The short-term losers, meanwhile, are often Republicans: the white
working-class people who will face a new group of labor-market competition when
they try to get jobs in retail; the taxpayers who, at least in the short term,
will have to pay some additional costs.
In the past, Republican politicians have had trouble
saying no to the latest and most radical insurgency. Even if they know
immigration reform is eventually good for their party, lawmakers may figure that
opposing it is immediately necessary for themselves.
It would be great if Republicans can hash out their
differences over a concrete policy matter, especially immigration, which touches
conservatism’s competing values. But if the insurgent right defeats immigration
reform, that will be a sign that the party’s self-marginalization will continue.
The revolution devours its own.
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