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Bad, Bad Republicans

The Washington establishment knows who to blame for the problems it refuses to address.

It’s Even Worse Than It Looks: How the American Constitutional System Collided with the New Politics of Extremism
By Thomas E. Mann and Norman J. Ornstein
(Basic Books, 226 pages, $26)

WHO BROKE WASHINGTON? According to these authors, the Republicans did—by organizing themselves into an ideological party that rejects compromise and moderation and refuses to work with Democrats to address the nation’s mounting problems of debt and entitlement spending. The authors indict Republicans for waging an all-out political war against President Obama, refusing to confirm his nominees for executive branch posts, blocking his legislative proposals with Senate filibusters, and generally opposing any piece of legislation that he supports, or that, if passed, might redound to his benefit.

The authors are two Washington insiders masquerading as “scholars” and, judging by their book, partisan Democrats pretending to be “independents” or “centrists.” Both Thomas E. Mann and Norman J. Ornstein have worked in D. C. for more than three decades, and, for the past quarter century, have maintained positions as senior fellows and congressional experts at the Brookings Institution (Mann) and the American Enterprise Institute (Ornstein). Like many in Washington who call themselves centrists or independents, Mann and Ornstein faithfully follow the Democratic Party line, favoring higher taxes and more regulation, along with the standard liberal package of campaign finance reforms. As Washington insiders, they naturally favor the party that arrogates more power to the national capital. It is hardly a wonder that they express little sympathy for an opposition party that has grown steadily more unified around conservative ideas since the 1980s.

This is a bad book in every way that a book can be bad. It is misleading, simplistic in its interpretation, and ignorant of widely known facts that contradict its partisan thesis. Most important, it is just plain wrong. Political debate is not “broken”; it is working much as the founders designed it to work. It is “broken” only from the standpoint of liberals who want to ram their agenda through Congress but cannot do so. If there is gridlock in Washington-well, then, that might be a good thing.

THE AUTHORS’ MAIN POINT is that the Republican Party has evolved into an ideological “outlier” in a constitutional system that works only through moderation and compromise. “The Republican Party,” they write, “has become an insurgent outlier: ideologically extreme; contemptuous of the inherited social and economic policy regime, scornful of compromise; unpersuaded [sic] by conventional understanding of facts, evidence, and science; and dismissive of the legitimacy of its political opposition.” The Republicans in Congress, they say, resemble nothing so much as a parliamentary party unified in opposition to Democrats and committed to their destruction, while the Democrats look more like a traditional American party, with many factions representing a spectrum of opinion. In a constitutional system such as ours, a willful and wellorganized minority can use the levers of power to frustrate the majority and bring the affairs of government to a stop.

This is what they suggest Republicans have done on and off since the 1990s, but increasingly so since Barack Obama was elected to the presidency in 2008. They recite chapter and verse the various steps Republican leaders have taken to oppose and even to embarrass President Obama and their Democratic opponents in Congress, from frequently using filibusters to block legislation, to placing “holds” on presidential appointments, to exploiting the debt ceiling to extort concessions. Mann and Ornstein insist that President Obama and Democratic leaders in Congress are moderates, despite all evidence to the contrary. They say that President Obama won a mandate to govern in 2008 but do not acknowledge that GOP victories in the 2010 elections might have given Republicans a mandate to block or reverse the administration’s policies. Nor do they acknowledge that Democrats narrowly passed the bulk of their agenda in 2009 and 2010—the stimulus, the budget, health care, and the Dodd-Frank banking bill—on extremely partisan votes.

The authors trace the origin of Republican “extremism” to Newt Gingrich and his discovery in the 1980s that the Democratic majorities in the House and Senate could be toppled if Republicans could discredit Congress as a corrupt operation out of touch with the people. Instead of working with Democrats, Gingrich decided it would be better to pick fights with them as a means of increasing public dissatisfaction with the institution. He exploited C-SPAN cameras to pick fights with Speaker “Tip” O’Neill, lodged ethics charges against Speaker Jim Wright, and, with his colleagues, focused attention on corruption in the House banking operation. At length, they succeeded in winning a majority in the House in the 1994 elections. But their victory came at a price: By discrediting Congress in the eyes of the public, they further poisoned the political atmosphere in Washington, thereby making it more difficult for either party to govern.

Mann and Ornstein reject various “bromides” (as they call them) that have been proposed to deal with the gridlock, such as the formation of a new party of independents or the adoption of a balanced budget amendment. They favor campaign reforms to outlaw political action committees and to ban campaign contributions by lobbyists and federal contractors. They judge the Supreme Court’s Citizens United decision to have been an epic mistake. They think a system of open primaries will give centrists greater influence over nominations, especially within the Republican Party.

More to the point, they propose a series of reforms they think will make it easier for Democrats to overwhelm Republicans in the electoral arena, such as easing voter registration requirements, making voting mandatory, and moving election day to the weekend—or, better yet, allowing a three-day window for voting. They oppose measures passed in several states that require prospective voters to present valid photo Ids. The authors are convinced that these measures will maximize voter turnout to the benefit of Democrats. They may or may not be right about this. In any case, there is no evidence to show that mobilizing more and more voters to the polls will produce more moderate parties. In fact, it will likely lead to further polarization.

THIS IS, OF COURSE, a one-sided narrative that the authors can maintain only by ignoring a mountain of contradictory facts. They find it convenient to blame Newt Gingrich and his Republican allies for the hyper-partisanship that now prevails in Washington. Yet President Bush (41) negotiated with Democrats in Congress to pass several key pieces of legislation, and even went so far as to abandon his “no new taxes” pledge in exchange for caps on spending, only to see Democrats keep the taxes, abandon the caps, and campaign against him for breaking his pledge. Gingrich and his fellow Republicans worked with Bill Clinton to pass welfare reform and to balance the federal budget. Barack Obama, on the other hand, spurned every offer of compromise from Republicans, and tried to ram his agenda through on partisan votes.

One would have to be living in a parallel universe to maintain, as the authors do, that the Democratic Party is a moderate and responsible political institution. This is the party, after all, that deploys taxpayers’ dollars to divide the nation by race, gender, and ethnicity, and that has had no qualms at all about organizing college campuses as bases of partisan activity. As for moderation, everyone recalls how Democrats stormed the capitol in Wisconsin and tried to disrupt the legislative process in protest of Governor Walker’s attempts to rein in public employee unions. This is standard practice for Democrats, and we will see more of it in the years to come, not only in places like Madison but in Washington, D.C. as well.

In addition, the casual observer might take a look at some of the jurisdictions around the country over which Democrats exercise complete control. There is Detroit, for example, a once thriving but now completely corrupt and bankrupt city that has not had a Republican mayor since the 1950s. Many other cities ruled by Democrats are on a fast track to the same destination. During the 1970s, Democrats spent New York City into bankruptcy, with the result that, for the past two decades, voters in this Democratic city have elected Republican mayors to oversee their affairs. Then there are Democratic states like California and Illinois that are in debt and effectively bankrupt, even as they chase businesses to other jurisdictions with their misguided tax and regulatory policies. If not for Republicans in Washington, Democrats would long ago have spent the United States into oblivion. They may yet succeed in doing so.

The great problem in Washington is not (as the authors say) the formation of a parliamentary party within a constitutional system designed for moderation and compromise. It is something entirely different: the creation of a party devoted to “big government” and increasingly organized around public employee unions, federal contractors, and beneficiaries of public programs, within a constitutional system designed to limit the power and reach of the national government. Democrats survive by expanding the size and scope of government. The framers of the Constitution designed it to prevent the formation of such a party and to frustrate its operations should one ever emerge. The distemper in Washington today is entirely caused by the emergence of this “government party” and its determination to expand governmental power at all costs. In opposing that agenda, Republicans are only carrying out their constitutional duty.

This book, though wrong in all of its major claims, is valuable in that it reveals how obtuse our “Inside the Beltway” thinkers are about what is happening in the United States and shows their inability to come to grips with the inevitable unwinding of the New Deal and post-war political system. Many Americans look to Washington pundits and experts for a measure of wisdom and moderation to guide the nation through its time of troubles. But by the evidence of this book, those virtues are in far too short supply to do any of us much good at this point.

About the Author

James Piereson is president of the William E. Simon Foundation and senior fellow at the Manhattan Institute. He is the author of Camelot and the Cultural Rev­olution: How the Assassination of John F. Kennedy Shattered American Liberalism (Encounter Books).

Letter to the Editor View all comments (15) |

Lullabys Legends and Lies| 7.2.12 @ 6:53AM

Thanks for the review, now I know that I can skip this book!! Who needs to read about how the Democrats "get it", and the Republicans "don't get it"? The Democrats have been the dominant Party in America for the last Century, and the things that are bankrupting us the most right now, were brought to us by them!! Be it Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid (now add to that list, the infamous Obamacare), their solution to every problem we face is more Government, bigger Government, more wasteful Government!! The Republican Party has its flaws, many flaws, but if you could put the two Parties on a scale to weigh them on the waste within, it's not even close, the Democrats are the fattest, most bloated group we've every seen!!

DTOM| 7.2.12 @ 8:07AM

Did Orstein and Mann remember to complain that all conservatives are racists, too?

And there is no vote fraud in the US - Charlie Rangel how're your primary results shaping up? Got that little problem fixed yet?

How many TAS readers are aware that bags of counted votes in Racine WI's recall elections from 9 of 36 precincts showed clear evidence of seals having been broken and re-sealed? And that those same bags were rejected by election officials, until somebody thought to put the offending bags with their illegally opened seals and tainted votes into NEW bags that had seals that were NOT broken-which the election officials then joyfully accepted?

In November - the cheaters and vote stealers will be very, very, very busy, America! You're on notice!!

Don't Tread On Me!

MelvinNC| 7.2.12 @ 7:51AM

Isn't Washington D.C. in a perennial masquerade ball, where everyone and everything isn't as it appears?
Term limits, people, term limits. I'll keep saying this till I'm blue in the face. That is the only way that we commoners can fight institutionalized corruption.

Jack of Spades| 7.2.12 @ 8:38AM

It's not quite right to call the Democrats the party of big government; it's closer to say that they're the party of unlimited government, with them in charge. This is naturally a formula for tyranny, which is why Dems, liberals and the left are always so careful to label themselves as "moderates" and their opposition as "extremists." "Moderate" and "extreme" in this context are basically weasel words invoked in an attempt to take certain arguments and ideas off the table, much in the same way a lawyer defending a guilty client will try to get incriminating evidence excluded.

Similarly, the Establishment blames its opposition's "unwillingness to compromise" as a way to justify its refusal to take necessary measures such as reducing spending to levels that match revenues.

Note also the dishonesty of the arguments. This is a dishonest book whose purpose is to give a facade of scholarship to a known set of liberal talking points.

rjh| 7.2.12 @ 8:43AM

Do these people truly not realize that the election in 2010 was all about STOPPING the liberal agenda, not compromising with them? It is obvious to anyone with a brain that when a liberal calls for compromise he means "do it my way".

TLP| 7.2.12 @ 8:57AM

So, the people from the Party of "PROJECTION" have come out with a New Book, projecting everything that THEY do, on to their opponents, once again.

What else is new?

The Republicans Lie. They hate Women and Minorities, and they wanna Kill your Grandma and your Autistic Kid.

Nothing "Works" in Washington, because Republicans won't work with Democrats, and they won't Compromise with President "I WON".

Republicans are outta touch with Main Stream America, whom everybody knows, is for Gay Marraige, Gays in the Military, Anal Sex Education in the 3rd Grade, the Joys of Masterbation in the 4th Grade, and the Wonderfulness of being Molested by an Older Adult, in every Grade.

The Party of No Borders, No Jobs, Nowhere to go but up.

The Party of the Klan, the Panthers, the Nation of Islam, and all of the wonderful Occupy people, who can't seem to take a Crap, unless their's a Police Car handy.

The Party of Tax and Spend, Soft on Crime, Blame America First, and Weak on Defence.

The Party of Appeasement, Surrender, Bug Out, and Bend Over, when confronted with an Enemy, led by a man who seems to always be on a World Wide Apology Tour.

I'm thinking that a more appropriate Title would have been: "I'm Rubber. You're Glue."

Or some such thing, as that.

I wonder if that book is big enough, to keep my truck from rolling backwards?

Hmmmm.

Al Adab| 7.2.12 @ 11:14AM

As you notice they project their own crooked actions onto others. If only the republicans were as machiavelian as the opposition fears they are. We might even win an election now and then. The problem with playing by the rules when the other side doesn't is being honest all the way to failure.

I of course am not suggesting that the GOP lie, cheat and steal. Leave that to the opposition, Simply make it plain how they operate (Chicago mobsters have nothing on the Dems) and hold them accountable to every law they violate.

TLP| 7.2.12 @ 5:57PM

I'm not suggesting that they Lie, Cheat, and Steal either.

I just want them to actually bring a GUN, to the next Gunfight, instead of their usual Plastic Fork

Diefledermaus| 7.2.12 @ 5:41PM

You forgot the Party of Dred Scott, Segregation, Jim Crow Laws and anti-Civil Rights ala 1964.

Mike G| 7.2.12 @ 9:07AM

I blame Republicans, too. They have done nothing but come to agreements with the socialists/communists for decades. Even when Repubs had a majority, they always came to an agreement. The trouble with coming to an agreement is that they never meet in the middle--they always meet to the left of the middle. After so many decades of meeting to the left, we find our nation in a shambles.

Al Adab| 7.2.12 @ 11:17AM

Mike, You rightly assess the blame. The accomodationist wing of the GOP has failed The Conservative Movement time and again. Now the GOP nominee is another in a long line of "moderates" from Dewey to Ford to Dole to McCain, who accept the legitimacy of the administrative social-welfare state. Where oh where is the voice crying "Do not talk to me of making government more efficient, for I intend to reduice its size."?

JP| 7.2.12 @ 9:31AM

When until states like California, New York, and Illinois have to cover billions in expanded Medicaid costs (via ObamaCare). Then we shall see how the Dems somehow will blame this on the GOP>

Petronius| 7.2.12 @ 11:09AM

We know the media get comped on books like this. I'd be mildly interested in the first week sales numbers though. How many are foolish enough to buy this tripe?

JD| 7.2.12 @ 12:05PM

In a sense, it's true that there's more "variety of opinion" on the left. There are leftists who wish to use big government to accomplish a wide variety of purposes. Some wish to impose racism. Some wish to impose their religions. Some wish to impose their hatred of material success. Many wish to make everyone else appreciate the things they like most.

The right, meanwhile, is simpler. We oppose all of those leftist things, and want a system that doesn't push us to do anything it doesn't have to. There's less room for "variety" in that direction.

That doesn't mean it's a bad direction, though.

rjh| 7.2.12 @ 1:11PM

There is a variety of opinion on the conservative side. We just do not try to ram it down everyone's throat. We merely want to be left alone by an overreaching government while we live our lives
IAW the Constitution.

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