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The GOP's Joe McCarthy Gene
Ever since the election, partisans within the Republican Party and observers outside it have been speculating wildly about what direction the GOP will take to revive itself from its disaster. Or, more specifically, which wing of the party will prevail in setting the new Republican course -- whether it will be what conservative writer Kathleen Parker has called the "evangelical, right-wing, oogedy-boogedy" branch or the more pragmatic, intellectual, centrist branch. To determine the answer, it helps to understand exactly how Republicans arrived at this spot in the first place.
The creation myth of modern conservatism usually begins with Barry Goldwater, the Arizona senator who was the party's presidential standard-bearer in 1964 and who, even though he lost in one of the biggest landslides in American electoral history, nevertheless wrested the party from its Eastern establishment wing. Then, Richard Nixon co-opted conservatism, talking like a conservative while governing like a moderate, and drawing the opprobrium of true believers. But Ronald Reagan embraced it wholeheartedly, becoming the patron saint of conservatism and making it the dominant ideology in the country. George W. Bush picked up Reagan's fallen standard and "conservatized" government even more thoroughly than Reagan had, cheering conservatives until his presidency came crashing down around him. That's how the story goes.
But there is another rendition of the story of modern conservatism, one that doesn't begin with Goldwater and doesn't celebrate his libertarian orientation. It is a less heroic story, and one that may go a much longer way toward really explaining the Republican Party's past electoral fortunes and its future. In this tale, the real father of modern Republicanism is Sen. Joe McCarthy, and the line doesn't run from Goldwater to Reagan to George W. Bush; it runs from McCarthy to Nixon to Bush and possibly now to Sarah Palin. It centralizes what one might call the McCarthy gene, something deep in the DNA of the Republican Party that determines how Republicans run for office, and because it is genetic, it isn't likely to be expunged any time soon.
The basic problem with the Goldwater tale is that it focuses on ideology and movement building, which few voters have ever really cared about, while the McCarthy tale focuses on electoral strategy, which is where Republicans have excelled.
McCarthy, Wisconsin's junior senator, was the man who first energized conservatism and made it a force to reckon with. When he burst on the national scene in 1950 waving his list of alleged communists who had supposedly infiltrated Harry Truman's State Department, conservatism was as bland, temperate and feckless as its primary congressional proponent, Ohio Sen. Robert Taft, known fondly as "Mister Conservative." Taft was no flamethrower. Though he was an isolationist and a vehement opponent of FDR, he supported America's involvement in the war after Pearl Harbor and had even grudgingly come to accept the basic institutions of the New Deal. He was also no winner. He had contested and lost the Republican presidential nomination to Wendell Willkie in 1940, Thomas Dewey in 1948 and Dwight Eisenhower in 1952, three men who were regarded as much more moderate than he.
McCarthy was another thing entirely. What he lacked in ideology -- and he was no ideologue at all -- he made up for in aggression. Establishment Republicans, even conservatives, were disdainful of his tactics, but when those same conservatives saw the support he elicited from the grass-roots and the press attention he got, many of them were impressed. Taft, no slouch himself when it came to Red-baiting, decided to encourage McCarthy, secretly, sealing a Faustian bargain that would change conservatism and the Republican Party. Henceforth, conservatism would be as much about electoral slash-and-burn as it would be about a policy agenda.
For the polite conservatives, McCarthy was useful. That's because he wasn't only attacking alleged communists and the Democrats whom he accused of shielding them. He was also attacking the entire centrist American establishment, the Eastern intellectuals and the power class, many of whom were Republicans themselves, albeit moderate ones. When he began his investigation of the Army, he even set himself against his own Republican president, who had once commanded that service. In the end, he was censured in 1954, not for his recklessness about alleged communists but for his recklessness toward his fellow senators. Moderate Republicans, not Democrats, led the fight against him. His intemperance disgusted them as much as it emboldened his fans, Goldwater among them.
But if McCarthy had been vanquished -- he died three years later of cirrhosis from drinking -- McCarthyism was only just beginning. McCarthyism is usually considered a virulent form of Red-baiting and character assassination. But it is much more than that. As historian Richard Hofstadter described it in his famous essay, "The Paranoid Style in American Politics," McCarthyism is a way to build support by playing on the anxieties of Americans, actively convincing them of danger and conspiracy even where these don't exist.
McCarthy, a Catholic, was especially adept at nursing national resentments among the sorts of people that typically did not vote Republican. He stumbled onto the fact that many of these people in postwar America were frightened and looking for scapegoats. He provided them, and in doing so not only won millions of adherents but also bequeathed to his party a powerful electoral bludgeon that would eventually drive out the moderates from the GOP (posthumous payback) before it drove the Democrats from the White House.
In a way, Goldwater was less a fulfillment of McCarthy conservatism than a slight diversion from it. Goldwater was ideological -- an economic individualist. He hated government more than he loved winning, and though he was certainly not above using the McCarthy appeal to resentment or accusing his opponents of socialism, he lacked McCarthy's blood- lust. McCarthy's real heir was Nixon, who mainstreamed McCarthyism in 1968 by substituting liberals, youth and minorities for communists and intellectuals, and fueling resentments as McCarthy had. In his 1972 reelection, playing relentlessly on those resentments, Nixon effectively disassembled the old Roosevelt coalition, peeling off Catholics, evangelicals and working-class Democrats, and changed American politics far more than Goldwater ever would.
Today, these former liberals are known as Reagan Democrats, but they were Nixon voters before they were Reagan voters, and they were McCarthy supporters before they were either. A good deal of McCarthy's support came from Catholics and evangelical Protestants who, along with Southerners, would form the basis of the new conservative coalition. Nixon simply mastered what McCarthy had authored. You demonize the opposition and polarize the electorate to win.
Reagan's sunny disposition and his willingness to compromise masked the McCarthyite elements of his appeal, but Reaganism as an electoral device was unique to Reagan and essentially died with the end of his presidency. McCarthyism, on the other hand, which could be deployed by anyone, thrived. McCarthyism was how Republicans won. George H.W. Bush used it to get himself elected, terrifying voters with Willie Horton. And his son, under the tutelage of strategist Karl Rove, not only got himself reelected by convincing voters that John Kerry was a coward and a liar and would hand the nation over to terrorists, which was pure McCarthyism, he governed by rousing McCarthyite resentments among his base.
Republicans continue to push the idea that this is a center-right country and that Americans have swooned for GOP anti-government posturing all these years, but the real electoral bait has been anger, recrimination and scapegoating. That's why John McCain kept describing Barack Obama as some sort of alien and why Palin, taking a page right out of the McCarthy playbook, kept pushing Obama's relationship with onetime radical William Ayers.
And that is also why the Republican Party, despite the recent failure of McCarthyism, is likely to keep moving rightward, appeasing its more extreme elements and stoking their grievances for some time to come. There may be assorted intellectuals and ideologues in the party, maybe even a few centrists, but there is no longer an intellectual or even ideological wing. The party belongs to McCarthy and his heirs -- Rush Limbaugh, Sean Hannity, Bill O'Reilly and Palin. It's in the genes.
Neal Gabler is the author of many books, including, most recently, "Walt Disney: The Triumph of the American Imagination."

23 Comments so far
Show AllUnderneath the giant wet rock that houses the Republican National Brain Trust are a legion of rabid mice running around on exercise wheels, generating ideas for The Great Comeback. The current Grand Epiphany goes something like this: America just elected a man of color, something the Republicans thought would never and could never happen. Well, we got our own . . . Bobby Ginmill . . . of Indian and Confederate extraction, dark skin, thirty-seven years old, ignorant religious fanatic, swindler, thief, liar . . . everything the Republicans love wrapped up in modern demographic tissue paper. Tomorrow, or the next day, it may be someone or something else. But right now, the two sure and certain things you can count on with Republicans - cynicism and stupidity - are causing the GOP, the Generators of Pornography, the Gangsters on Parade, the Gods of Petroleum, to begin rubbing their hands and foaming at the mouth. President Bobby Ginmill.
A more apt description of this section of the Republican party is the SA (Sturmabteilung) wing. They share many traits in common.
www.wunderman-comics.com
What direction the GOP will take to revive itself from its disaster?
Follow the lemmings
into the sea!
My prophesy is that the party will finish the split GWB caused, with the bunch we've had to endure for the past ten years, the "evangelical, right-wing, oogedy-boogedy" branch as Neal calls them building up their party, revamping their strategies and retaining the name GOP - with a far better prepared Sarah Palin at the helm, while the more pragmatic, intellectual, centrist branch will also reform their Republican party.
It's a good time for the Independent parties to start doing the same.
Party Politics rule. The "Good of the party" is paramount over and above the "Good of the People".
If the republicans must burn the village that is America in order to save itself they will do so.
Were I an American I would be very concerned.
In a recent televised interview one Grover Norquist made the claim that the current crisis in the United States was triggered by the election of a majority of the Democrats in 2006. He suggested that the collapse was due to the "anticipation" that those same Democrats would roll back the tax cuts for the wealthy.
McCarthyism existed before McCarthyism.
There were the Know Nothings among many others who displayed the ugly side of the American (human) character.
McCarthy adjusted to his times and put his hand on its pulse. That is why he momentarily succeeded. Today there are the rightwing Christian fundamentalists who still see victory within their grasp They're not going to soon go away. Passion and certainty (as well as money) fuel them on.
What's more, throughout American history (human history?) greed has run like a powerful thread. And quashing the "red scare" (ie, labor unions, big government, liberalism, etc.) which the right has been most successful at, is part of that story. The so-called philosophy of paleocons is merely a refined justification for that greed. Nor will any of that soon go away either, even if Obama brings us a successful "New Deal" type administration. Which, at this time, would be considered radical and daring.
"The modern conservative is engaged in one of man's oldest exercises in moral philosophy; that is, the search for a superior moral justification for selfishness.” John Kenneth Galbraith
Sioux Rose
QUINTY: The Galbraith quote is important, and says it all so succinctly!
Gabler is quite correct. He isn't making any sort of new or radical observation, of course. Supporting his thesis is the plethora of new McCarthy revisionists who have appeared in recent years--rather than trying to distance themselves from McCarthyism, a segment of the right that is increasingly penetrating the mainstream has set about trying to rehabilitate his reputation.
I wrote an article, earlier this year, about this phenomenon, and tried to do a little straightening of the historical record. My piece is here:
http://claslib2.tripod.com/lh/mccarthy.html
I've linked it through my blog, if anyone cares to comment there:
http://claslib2.tripod.com/pow/
A thorough and nicely written review of the McCarthy debacle, and worth reading as an addendum to this article. If blame is to be placed for the mischief achieved by lunatics like McCarthy and Bush/Rove it should be focused on the gullibility of an uncritical public. Unwillingness to demand transparency from such people (Show us your list, Joe. Show us the WMDs General Powell. Show us your books, Exxon. Show us next year's low mileage models, GM.) is what promotes the legitimacy of much destructive nonsense. There is a Joe McCarthy in every bar in Washington. There is a George Bush under every rock in Texas. Their personal pathologies should be of interest only to their mothers or their therapists. But whose fault is it that we listen to them, take them seriously, elect them to high office, shovel treasury money into their pockets? Ours I would say.
McCarthyism is not just in the Republican party. Didn't the NYTimes writer Edward Rothstein do a red-baiting article on Studs Terkel, on 11/03/2008 right after Terkel died? Howard Zinn wrote an article that was put on CommonDreams refuting that bit of McCarthyism. Red baiting pops up in all kinds of places, in addition to the Republican party. Unless you count the media as part of the Republican Party? Or people whose political party affiliation we don't know who do red baiting?
The far-rightists, represented by Sarah Palin, will win the GOP power struggle. It will be interesting to see what the so-called "centrists" (i.e. center-rightists) do when they totally lose power within the Republican Party.
This is absolutely right. The Communist/Nazi/Elmer Gantry faction of the Republican party will maintain its hold on power. In the next 4 years they will be soaking the building with gasoline and will try to set it on fire in 2012. The so-called "centrists", the Brent Scowcrofts and Colin Powells, will either do what Susan Eisenhower did and quit the party to become independents, or become Clinton-style Democrats.
This aritcle is absolutely naive as hell! As somebody who has seen the GOP's fortune go up and down, and it especially went down in 1964 and has had hands own experience in helping to beat same, I have to say the last election will be a lot easier to make a comeback from that 1964. Nor is it in the least that I think highly at all about the GOP as currently run.
I would love to see progressives run over these bullies big time, but I'll guarantee that sure as hell isn't about to happen, given a lot of different variables, and no I didn't do a multi variate regression analysis on this like Anthony Russo, whom I met a conference on research of different kinds back in the late 1970s in suburban LA, might. Oh, and I didn't mention Russo was with Daniel Ellsberg in breaking open things having to do with the Pentagon Papers.
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I didn't put this in, but I wrote an article on this very topic and have it in my blog which is listed with Red Pepper, a British progressive magazine. If Common Dreams would like to publish it, then that would at least provide folks with something much more realistic, and in the fight against a new McCarthyism, we sure as hell need it, for it threatens the most basic of rights and liberties in the name of "security."
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McCarthyism, Reaganism, all these 'isms' create too much credit for all these nitwits. Why not just call it nihilism ?
Robert Taft was known as Mister Republican, not Mister Conservative.
I have begun to suggest to my Republican friends that they might be happier if they would buy some bib overalls and move to Mississippi, the spiritual center and demographic redoubt of paranoid conservatism in America. In our southern swamplands you don't have to make subtle racist jokes or defend preposterous tales about how liberals are to blame for the Bush disaster or try to convince everybody that Mexican immigration is polluting our culture. Down there in GOP Hollow you can relax, get yourself some spider web tattoos, shave your head, marry your sister, set crosses afire and drink homemade whiskey with like minded people.
Demonization does not begin with the GOP -- it's much older ...
Mainly this technique of demonizing propaganda goes back to
the Vatican and their 100 year campaign vs Jews who had been
freed from 1000 years of oppression by the Vatican in Papal States.
Hitler was inspired by the Catholic Church and its propaganda and
used it successfully. Nixon's White House showed considerable
interest in studying Nazi propaganda.
Notice that after the Emmancipation Proclamation the demonizing
of African Americans continued on another 100 years in Segregation.
Demonizing was a large part of the campaign against native Americans --
though the murderers, enslavers and land stealers were the real
demons. That campaign ended in genocide.
Demonization of women by organized patriarchal writings in the Bible
are still with us and still effective.
And, demonization of homosexuals, of course --
"According to all myth, the female - not the male -- gives life"
The Republicans of today are the anti-FDR's. By this I mean, the only thing they have to fear is a lack of fear itself! Without fear they've really got nothing at all. Without fear, their political party would evaporate. McCain's horrendous presidential bid was evidence of how little they really have, other than fear. And they are not gone, only subdued for a little while. If McCain had lost by a landslide, I'd say they might well be a goner, but he didn't lose by enough to say that the rubes aren't still buying their fear based horseshit...like the lady at the McCain rally said about Obama..."he's a Arab".
Stupid people make the Republican world go round. And I'm sorry, but stupid people aren't going away. This crap is going to continue forever, because fear and stupidity go on forever. Doesn't take a genius to understand this maxim, which is why McCain got as far as he did. Mr. 894 out of 899 is clearly no genius, and his entire campaign was betting on his lack of "elitism", aka smartness, being a solid plus. Which is why he chose Palin, because she is the poster-child for this theorem. Being dumber than a rock turned out to be political genius, and her innate ability to drive the herd with fear, hatred and bias, made her the perfect running mate for old man McCain! An advantageous position from which to run in this, the United Stupid of America (thanks to Bill Maher for that one!).
Sad statement. Kinda limits the ability of smart people to keep the dumb people at bay long enough to clean up after the last one who fucked everything up! Actually, he ain't done yet...
The US Representative from the 6th District in Minnesota, Michelle Bachmann, is the new Joe McCarthy, with her televised tirades October 17 on Hardball against Democratic Congressmen who are "anti-American"! And calling for the investigation of members of Congress who she deems "anti-American"!
And she was re-elected on November 4!
I'm not making this up!
It just goes to show that Neanderthals continue to have appeal to the American electorate, from Minnesota to Mississippi, and that includes my state of Iowa with the reactionary demagogue, Steve King.
Bill in Dubuque
If the legacy of McCarthy and Nixon and Bush/Cheney/Rove is "You demonize the opposition and polarize the electorate to win", then how do we explain the utter failure of this tried and true GOP tactic when it was focused against Barack Obama in 2008?
Sarah Palin delivered her scripted wedge issue messages with pizazz, enabling John McCain to keep a fairly honorable distance above the fray. The whole hate radio segment of the AM dial chanted along, echoing in unison how Obama was a closet Muslim enamored with black liberation theology, an elite leftist figurehead propped up by the corrupt Chicago Daley machine, pursuing a not-so-hidden agenda to raise taxes and take away the guns of "real" God fearing Americans.
Yet for this election cycle at least, the slime didn't stick. Why?
If Gabler's thesis is correct (that Republicans really do electoral slash and burn better than they do ideology), then perhaps a majority of American voters have genuinely managed to outgrow and move beyond shallow jingoism (at least when the domestic economy is of overriding concern, and the consequences of unchecked right wing GOP rule loom so clear). Perhaps above all it was a generational thing. I hope that's what finally happened.
Red baiting predated Joe McCarthy of course, as did another GOP staple that Gabler for some reason leaves unmentioned: appeals to raw American militarism. Think Teddy Roosevelt. Remember the wailing about how Truman somehow "lost" China? George W. Bush and his cohorts in crime have put an enormous amount of effort into building up the Pentagon/Homeland Security voting bloc as a permanent fixture of the US partisan landscape.
I worry that another domestic terrorist attack, this time on Democratic President Barack Obama's watch, could help the Republican Party paper over its current divisions, reconstitute, and revitalize its base very quickly. The rhetorical groundwork has already been laid.
Whatever happens, whenever it happens, you can bet your last devalued buck that the boys of the American Enterprize Institute are poised to link forearms with lunch bucket fundamentalist Neanderthals everywhere, in order to bellow out a furious chorus or two of "I told you so."
Bill from Saginaw
For any who are offended by my bringing up Anthony Russo in that one post, given his death this year in August, i sincerely apologize. He was a great man, and I was proud of having met and had the opportunity to talk to him at a conference on different kinds of research in suburban LA.
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The issue whether anyone is a “naturally born citizen” can be complicated when one of the parents (or both) is not a US citizen at the time of birth of a child. Here is a real example. In the year of birth of Mr. Obama one of my friends, Dr. Dolf de Vries was with his wife in the continental USA (actually in New York State) when their oldest daughter was born. Dolf was a citizen of the Netherlands. In the Netherlands all children had (and still have) only the nationality of their father hence the citizenship of the mother was irrelevant under Dutch law (she was actually a Dutch citizen too). The Dutch did not and still do not accept multiple citizenship in most cases. For the Dutch law the daughter was a Dutch citizen. For the US law she was transiently an American.
Please readers correct me if I am wrong. I understand that the daughter had to choose at age 21 whether she wished to be a US citizen or a Dutch citizen. If she made no official decision it was assumed that she had renounced her “naturally born US citizenship”.
I understand that Mr. Obama’s father was a Kenyan citizen when Obama was born. I do not know whether this case is identical to that of Dolf’s daughter or whether Mr. Obama had to renounce a Kenyan citizenship ever. There is no reason to assume that two cases are exactly alike in the incredibly Byzantine world of citizenships of different nations.
I hope that the US Supreme Court will rule for Mr. Obama if it takes up the case and at the same time will better define what constitutes “naturally born” if that is at all possible without changing our constitution.