Yevetha
Commodore
Those who think that the Republican party will quickly recover, as in 2010, are gravely mistaken. The GOP of today is a shattered party, listing badly to one side if you think of it as a ship. It is an increasingly white party in a country going in the opposite direction. Several of its more moderate congressional members have been lost, leaving a party top-heavy with voices who come from safe (or safer) districts. A drunken binge of spending and incompetence over the last eight plus years mark its legacy, outweighing any and all good it has accomplished during that time and distorting the future it surely still has. If the party is to emerge as a competitive force to the Democrats in the way it needs to, it will take longer than two years, or maybe even four. It needs to determine what direction it wants to go in as a party, and who has power in it. If it continues to allow social conservatives (who voted for John McCain in greater numbers than for George W. Bush in several states) the power they've had, they will continue to lose overall influence in this country. If it finds its roots while also refocusing for the future and understanding how to deal with the problems Americans face today, they'll eventually get back into power. It cannot and will not be just because Democrats may (or may not) overreach. Counting on another party or person's failure is not a pathway to success, especially when that other party has so recently been through its own trials and is now led by a president-elect who took down two powerful machines on his way to being elected to the presidency (the Clinton machine and the right wing).
What shall its future be?
Libertarianism or Rick Santorum?
What shall its future be?
Libertarianism or Rick Santorum?