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Lincoln Mitchell

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Does America Need an Angry President?

Posted: 02/21/2012 10:19 am

When the 2012 election is finally concluded, the current popularity of Rick Santorum among Republican voters will probably be viewed as part of the continuum of enthusiasm for various right-wing politicians who were unable to muster enough support to prevent Mitt Romney -- who is beginning to seem like the kind of plutocratic Energizer Bunny who just keeps going and going -- from eventually winning the nomination.

Santorum is nonetheless a fascinating political and cultural phenomenon, and while still a long shot, the only Republican candidate other than Romney with a chance of representing the GOP in November against President Barack Obama. Santorum's candidacy reflects the marriage of radical views on social issues with the anger and resentment towards an array of targets, that characterizes much of today's Republican Party.

Santorum's views on contraception, for example, are extreme, but also almost surreal. While it is not unusual to find politicians with conservative social views, Santorum's position on this issue seems more calculated to demonstrate the extent to which he is out of the American mainstream than to actually have an impact on policy. Santorum's anti-contraception views are so unpopular and unworkable that they likely serve no other purpose than proving to the Republican base that Santorum is indeed, the most retrograde candidate around.

Santorum has been out of the Senate for six years, but more significantly has not won an election since 2000. Moreover, Santorum's last experience as a candidate was being drubbed by an 18 point margin by Bob Casey Jr. After that defeat, Santorum spent much of the last six years in various parts of the far right movement, including the right-wing think tank community and Fox News. It is impressive that Santorum was able to keep his political future alive after such a resounding defeat in 2006, but he did so not by trying to learn from his defeat and understand the problems and challenges facing Americans, but by deepening his identity on the far right.

In addition to spending these six years in the reactionary wilderness, Santorum also seems to have embraced the anger and resentment that characterizes the right wing of the Republican Party. There may be several reasons for this, but losing an election, as an incumbent, by 18 points can lead to many reactions, among which one of the easiest is anger. It is this heady brew of anger and righteousness which makes Santorum resonate so well with his party's base while also making him almost uniquely unfit to be president.

In the unlikely event that Santorum becomes the Republican nominee the election may well turn out to be substantially about right-wing anger, but even if Romney is the nominee, the Republican campaign will still have to address the anger issue. Right-wing anger has fueled the Tea Party movement and been at the core of the party's message for most of the time since the last months of the 2008 campaign. Anger, and a corresponding desire to provoke liberals and moderates, as an end in itself, explains much of the behavior of Republican presidential aspirants, not least Santorum.

Anger explains, for example, Santorum's views on contraception, and the place those views have come to take in his campaign. It is hard to imagine that any Republican strategist who seriously wanted to elect Santorum would suggest that Santorum stress, or even mention, his views on contraception and link contraception to the abortion debate, as Republicans have begun to either do or allow Democrats to do. If however, the candidate is motivated by his own anger, this behavior makes more sense.

During the general election, the difference in tone between President Obama and his Republican opponent will be hard to ignore. There are also, of course, many substantive differences between Obama and whoever his eventual opponent will be. Even if that opponent is the more moderate Romney, the two candidates will differ on most major policy issues as well as their retrospective evaluations of the Obama presidency. However, Americans will also have to decide whether or not they want an angry president who feels an acute, if mystifying, sense of victimization, and who will divide Americans, not simply as a necessary tool for winning in elections, but because that is his default political setting.

Critics of President Obama undoubtedly see him as divisive, but his rhetoric, at least, seeks to bring people together and speak to Americans as if we are one people with unified goals and aspirations. There has been very little of that kind of rhetoric from any of the Republican candidates, other than protestations regarding alleged class warfare by Democrats who have the radical notion that the very rich should be taxed at at least the same rate as other Americans. At a time when our country desperately needs to come together to solve our problems and move forward, no Republican candidate has bothered to put that simple and obvious idea at the center of their campaign. Americans may be worried about their jobs, unsure of the future or not satisfied with President Obama. All these things could help the Republicans, but not if they expect voters to be as angry as Rick Santorum.

 
 
 

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DakotaMinnesota
Read About Smedley Butler.
10:34 AM on 02/24/2012
Regardless of being right wing, Santorum is WAY too vehemently opinionated to be the president. Talk about an activist...
HUFFPOST PUNDIT
realpolitic
GOP is full of sound and fury, signifying nothing!
10:46 AM on 02/22/2012
The author is right.  Anger fuels the right. It is all they have.  They seem not to want to govern or create jobs, just to divide us along endless culture war battles. These battles are interminable.  They are chipping away at a women's right to choose, making buying and carrying guns as easy as buying popcorn, and even are guilty of wholesale voter disenfranchisement.  Are they a political party or just representative of some wicked force that wants to overturn pollution laws and create the largest disparities of income we have ever known. Their policies do much more to harm us than do any good.
08:35 AM on 02/22/2012
We need an angry President who will not be satisfied that the current conditions in this Country are rectified. We do not need an angry President who is attempting to divide this Country through class warfare.
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DakotaMinnesota
Read About Smedley Butler.
10:27 AM on 02/24/2012
I hope you never see what real class warfare looks like.
08:06 AM on 02/22/2012
Some potential GOP campaign bumper stickers inspired by
Santorum & Romney;

"2008 Hope/2012 Hate"
"Sex is for Procreation only"
"Vote no for Womens Rights"
"Repeal Gays everywhere"
"Religion trumps Health"
"1%, Out of Touch & Proud of it"
"Invade for oil...again"
"Newtie's looking better by the day"
"USA, Our Trees are the right size"
"Godly Vests Rule"
Ad Nasuem............
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Radar335
An eye for an eye and the world goes blind.
10:01 AM on 02/22/2012
Good one!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
toofarleft4thisworld
the Lord giveth; the Landlord taketh away
06:52 AM on 02/22/2012
he's not angry, he's mad.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
03:42 AM on 02/22/2012
America does not need an angry Republican President.

Neither does America need any more angry Republican obstructionists in Congress, who, so far, have done more damage to American democracy and our economy than any foreign enemy in our history has.
TRRoughRider
Truth be Known
02:14 AM on 02/22/2012
Does Amercia need an angry President he asks. No, first and foremost America needs to get back to elections that nominate a President that will represent the entire Country and get away from these Auctions that place only candidates in the position of being elected as nominee for President to represent only the interests of the 1%.
02:01 AM on 02/22/2012
Seriously!!??? Obama is trying to bring people together?? Which people would that be? The rich and the poor? The Democrats and the Republicans?? Who is Obama trying to bring together?? All Americans being together?? Or Americans hating other Americans??
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DakotaMinnesota
Read About Smedley Butler.
10:31 AM on 02/24/2012
The excessive number of question marks you use suggests that you have a problem regulating your passion, and maybe that is part of the problem. What about the president makes you think he is trying to divide us?
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02:21 PM on 02/24/2012
You won't ever get an answer to your question Dakota, because the constant charges from the right of Obama being divisive are just irrational. Basically, it's just the opposite. He has done everything to try and work with the GOP/TP.

They never provide any examples -- except for the passage of ObamaCare, which they fought. And since it was passed and signed, that is their case. But Obama compromised on that, diluting it in major ways from the original vision. Still, the GOP sees that as a loss, which they are furious about.

Winning, and having it 100% their way is all that matters for them. Any call for them to compromise is labeled by them as being divisive.
01:45 AM on 02/22/2012
Gee if Obama doesn't win, will the left be very angry?? Or will they just be very happy??
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01:11 AM on 02/22/2012
you give too much credit to a bossy bully wannabe
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
FearlessFreep
I'm actually a radical leftist
12:40 AM on 02/22/2012
It's a shame Obama isn't angrier.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Pupadup4oBama
04:49 AM on 02/22/2012
It's a shame WE, the people, aren't angrier.

2-O-12
NeapTide
My micro-bio is empty. OH NOooo
12:29 AM on 02/22/2012
Does America Need an Angry President? I'd say no, not really. Besides the GOP has so much more fun running for office being mad AT the president.
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12:29 AM on 02/22/2012
The ANGRY MAN, could be a Movie ! Rick as the Caped Crusader, holding forth his sword, wearing the Catholic Mantle, and slaying the Obama Dragon, before he can scorch the US with his fiery Black, Islamic, Gay, Hoards. Women fleeing in all directions, as Ricky skewers any one of them for mentioning the word, (shhh), Abortion, or contraceptives, or even ( inter-course). He is auditioning for the Part, practicing his lines, crafting his delivery, but sadly, the Black Guy comes to the rescue, and wins the day. Great Movie, loved the ending.
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aacme
My micro-bio is on a strict need-to-know basis.
10:58 PM on 02/21/2012
I think anyone who is not angry is not paying attention, but Santorum's anger just shows how out of touch he is.
Anger at what has has happened to the middle class, at the fact that it will continue because nothing has changed and nobody in power wants it to, at the collapse of any real economic efforts in favor of the no-bid contracts of the continual warmongering of the right, including the War on Terror and against drugs, anger at the systematic corruption of our political system, where bribery is what gets people elected and bribery is what gets bills passed or rejected, where average people cannot afford healthcare or education, That's just the beginning, but when we have a president that's angry at those things we will start fixing them.
oilfield
small manufacturing business owner
10:53 PM on 02/21/2012
what a lousy choice we have in november.......from either party.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
FearlessFreep
I'm actually a radical leftist
12:41 AM on 02/22/2012
And anyone who votes for a third party gets labelled a "purist."