iPhone app iPad app Android phone app Android tablet app More

Featuring fresh takes and real-time analysis from HuffPost's signature lineup of contributors
Mike Lux

GET UPDATES FROM Mike Lux
 

The Problem Is the Base

Posted: 08/22/2012 12:12 pm

The fundamental problem for the Republican party isn't Todd Akin's crazy rape statement on Sunday, or the fact that he refused to drop out of the Senate race, or even that other Republican extremists like Steve King are keeping the story alive by supporting and encouraging him (more on that below). The fundamental problem is the Republican party base, in which Akin, King and, yes, Paul Ryan sit snugly and comfortably in the middle.

So, yes, the last few days have been rough for Todd Akin and the Republican Party. First came the local news interview, that little "legitimate rape" thingy. Then came the rightfully angry responses from women and the faux outrage from fellow Republicans (who mostly had agreed with Akin on his abortion policy and his attempts to narrow the definition of rape), then the "sorry but not sorry" apology from Akin, then came Romney and Ryan assuring voters that their administration would not deny abortions to victims of rape and incest -- even though their platform and Ryan's voting record contradict that statement.

Right about now, the Republican Party is trying to paint Todd Akin as an extreme outlier, an embarrassing anomaly with views far from anything that Mitt Romney and Paul Ryan would believe. But they can't put this story to bed so easily. Ryan's voting record, and the record of the House Republicans on these issues, won't let them. And neither will the candidates they will have to run with in key swing states like Iowa Congressman Steve King. If King is any indication, and I believe he is, Akin isn't as far out of line as the GOP would like voters to think. King, who is in of the most highly targeted races in the country against a great Democratic candidate Christie Vilsack, defended Akin yesterday, saying he didn't know anyone who had been raped and gotten pregnant either.

Meanwhile, the same day at the Iowa State Fair, to a crowd of excited fans, Iowa Congressman Steve King announced that he would do everything he could to help his good friend, Paul Ryan, and running mate Mitt Romney get to the White House. He told the crowd that "Paul listens to me," and that he would play a huge role in the Romney/Ryan administration. Yeah, huge.

Some background on Ryan's close friend Steve King is in order for those who may not know of him. While Romney and Ryan have been trying to balance a conservative credibility with their moderate public image, King has made no such attempts. This past May at a town hall meeting in Pocahontas, Iowa, King answered a question regarding immigration. He said that the United States historically has had the "pick of the litter" when it came to immigrants. He compared immigrants to dogs, saying:

We've always had bird dogs around our place in our family. There's a black lab and a white lab, a yellow lab, and my brother has a chocolate lab. Well you go in and you look at the litter of pups, and you watch them. You want a good bird dog, and you want the one that's gonna be aggressive? Pick the one that's the friskiest, the one that's in the games the most -- not the one that's over there sleeping in the corner. You want a pet to sit on the couch, pick the one that's sleeping in the corner.

)

Given how much respect King has for dogs, this was a pretty incendiary comment.

What King and Akin represent is a growing Tea Party influence on the once-moderate Republican Party. More candidates are rising through the ranks, backed by Tea Party intensity, Koch brothers and other special interest money and far right Christian ideas, to remake the "American Dream" and bring "values" back to a godless and secular United States. What would have seemed ridiculous to propose 10 years ago is being passed through state legislatures across the country and in the Republican-controlled U.S. House. These days, some states blatantly ignore Roe v. Wade, while other states pass laws like Arizona SB 1070 to aggressively question and detain anyone who looks as though they may be an illegal immigrant.

King and Akin also represent a view of government that Romney and Ryan try to downplay in the press. But both Romney and Ryan are clearly pro-life. Romney said that he would "absolutely" support a personhood bill to protect unborn fetuses and criminalize abortion, Ryan has throughout his career supported outlawing abortion even in cases of rape and incest, and as mentioned before the Republican platform on the issue is at the far edge of extremism. And don't forget that Paul Ryan -- along with Akin, King and 213 other Republican members of Congress, the vast majority of their caucus -- cosponsored HR-3. The bill, as amended and passed in the House of Representatives, was designed to keep taxpayer money from funding abortions and, in the first draft, also legally redefined rape to "forcible" rape and banned abortion in cases of rape and incest as well.

Paul Ryan, Mitt Romney and the rest of the GOP are trying desperately to turn the subject back to the economy, because the hard times of the last four years has made voters open to kicking the incumbent out. They say that Todd Akin and Steve King misspoke, and that their views do not represent the whole of the Republican Party. But while candidates from the Republican base like Akin and King aren't as slick as Romney and Ryan and the way they express themselves isn't as carefully poll-tested, the fact is that both on social issues and economic issues, Romney and Ryan's policy positions are every bit as extreme as the Republican base. The fact that Romney picked Paul Ryan, whose stands on abortion are identical to Akin and King and whose budget could have been written by the Koch brothers, is the ultimate sign that the far right tea party Republican base is thoroughly in charge.

Steve King was right was right. Paul Ryan does listen to him. He would be a huge player in a Romney-Ryan administration. No matter how off-message King and Akin are, they and the Republican base run the Republican party's policy platform.

 

Follow Mike Lux on Twitter: www.twitter.com/ProgressiveLux

FOLLOW POLITICS
The fundamental problem for the Republican party isn't Todd Akin's crazy rape statement on Sunday, or the fact that he refused to drop out of the Senate race, or even that other Republican extremists ...
The fundamental problem for the Republican party isn't Todd Akin's crazy rape statement on Sunday, or the fact that he refused to drop out of the Senate race, or even that other Republican extremists ...
 
 
  • Comments
  • 112
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
Page: 1 2 3 4  Next ›  Last »  (4 total)
10:15 AM on 08/23/2012
Republicans created their own monster. You reap what you sow.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
10:11 AM on 08/23/2012
And it's no surprise that the strongest supporters of the Republican party are uneducated white males (well, after of course, the plutocrats greedily desperate for more, more, more for me, me, me.)
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
BassguyGG
Former Moderate driven Left by eight years of Bush
10:09 AM on 08/23/2012
Spot-on, Mr. Lux! No matter what they may say, these right-wing concepts are the mainstream of the Republican Party now. Some pretend to be moderates, others don't bother to pretend. They want smaller government, except in the bedroom. They want to bring back a 1950's style social order (preferably with elements of McCarthy-type ideological testing), along with Gilded Age economic disparity and disproportionate representation of the Rich. This is who they are, and any non-millionaire who votes for these people is voting against their own interests.
nothingchanges
too soon old, too late smart
09:30 AM on 08/23/2012
Personal opinion.........

It ain't the base............it's demographics.

The Republican Party represents angry older white males. A demographic that shrinks by the year.
They will either "evolve" or face extinction.

Which is interesting because Republicans in general claim not to "believe" in evolution.

No great loss.

I fit the description of their current "base".............and they sure as heck don't represent ME.
Oh I forgot one important qualifier..........angry older FILTHY RICH white males.
THAT explains it.
09:42 PM on 08/22/2012
The Repugs have been going further right for decades....it is now obvious.

I would say things probably started in the early 1980's.....

And the sad thing to see is the law of unintended consequences that even the Repugs with all their fanatical Christian base (and big money backers like the Koch Brothers) won't be able to control.

----------

One thing that is getting more and more common among white (not just minority) working class young people is more living together and starting families without getting married.

Why?

Too much financial insecurity probably leads the list.

Plenty of electronic toys (like laptops) but no real security about having a good job, buying a house, even knowing there is social security for retirement "someday".

With so much insecurity, the young people often live for today.
Add on the disgusting antics of church leaders and some of their most fanatical followers.....hypocrites

The Repugs are sacrificing kids' education, college student aid, and other programs.
The younger people see how they are being thrown to the wolves.

------
An unjust and rotting economic system going all out for the 1-2% with greed, selfishness.....

Simply put, the young people see no reason to be the "good Christian" (hypocrites) that the older people want them to be.

The unwillingness to get legally married is just one manifestation of an angry and sullen younger generation.

Even in the American heartland, marriage rates are going down.

The law of unintended consequences.
photo
moviefantastic
The truth shall set you free
09:29 PM on 08/22/2012
The problem with the Republican base is that it's full of people who care only for themselves. The rest of us don't matter. We're not even a blip on the radar. All that matters is their 1%. The rest doesn’t' count. Why should they care if the Social Security safety net is ripped from seniors when that money could fill the coffers of the insurance industry.

The pharmaceutical industry stands to make millions when generic medications are no longer an option. Under the ACA, this would have taken money out of pharm's pocket, and placed it in the hands of seniors.

And the EPA. I am so grateful to the EPA. The air that I breathe is clean, the water is safe to drink. I enjoy that so much. Any mean old company that wants to pollute the air, will face fines from the EPA. Granted, the EPA needs more teeth, but it's better than nothing.

Romney/Ryan/Akin/and the 1%.

I don't like this at all.
09:53 AM on 08/23/2012
First of all the vast majority of charitable donations given in this country comes from conservatives, so they do think of others. They think of others as people that with "some" help can provide for themselves and sleep good at night because of that ability. You "think" that anyone in need, no matter the circumstances should receive from above, and all this has done is increased the numbers. Why go to work for 40 hours per week at $10 per hour when you can live about the same without getting up, driving or walking to work, lunch, and not nearly as much time on your hands as you would like. Makes sense to me...BUT maybe, just maybe, if you do go, every day,, and do your job to the best of your ability, maybe you will receive $12 per hour. Maybe get more responsibility,, maybe even get a bit a bit more freedom. You really can have what you need in America all by yourself and it is also possible for you to have what you want, but not by asking for it. You must go and get it....You will lose some free time, but just exactly what have you been doing with it anyway?????
photo
moviefantastic
The truth shall set you free
09:10 PM on 08/23/2012
Mitt Romney is proposing a tax plan "that would give millionaires another tax break and raises taxes on middle class families by up to $2,000 a year."
http://www.politifact.com/truth-o-meter/statements/2012/aug/03/barack-obama/obama-romney-would-cut-millionaires-taxes/

"Gov. Romney's plan would cut taxes for the folks at the very top."
http://www.politifact.com/truth-o-meter/statements/2012/jul/24/barack-obama/barack-obama-says-mitt-romney-tax-plan-would-cut/

Democrats say Mitt Romney failed to disclose offshore company in Bermuda
http://www.politifact.com/truth-o-meter/statements/2012/jul/10/robert-gibbs/democrats-say-mitt-romney-failed-disclose-offshore/

Mitt Romney has "proposed cutting his own taxes while raising them on 18 million working families."
http://www.politifact.com/truth-o-meter/statements/2012/may/08/barack-obama/obama-says-romney-would-cut-his-own-taxes-while-ra/

Barack Obama says Mitt Romney's tax plan gives millionaires an average tax cut of $250,000
http://www.politifact.com/truth-o-meter/statements/2012/may/08/barack-obama/barack-obama-says-mitt-romneys-tax-plan-gives-mill/
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
DianneinCA
running forward, laughing...
09:25 PM on 08/22/2012
Get out and VOTE, Democrats.
08:44 PM on 08/22/2012
How long do you think the GOP money PACS will keep their promise to withdraw their money from Akin's campaign? I predict about 1 week.
photo
christiana
Lover of all things Dwight.
07:46 PM on 08/22/2012
This is the same King that sees nothing wrong with dogfighting. Nuff said.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Martin Houde
I am no microbe
07:46 PM on 08/22/2012
The sanctity of life according to the GOP : From conception to birth. After that, you're on your own.
09:59 AM on 08/23/2012
AND,, what is wrong with that??????? If you need someone to take care of you, your whole life, then you should have remained a child....You can do better,
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mudman
07:31 PM on 08/22/2012
Why would women vote for a party that has so much contempt for their sex? Can any woman who is supporting R and r in the upcoming election please explain? Anyone?
photo
TMtom
Imagination is greater than detail.
07:31 PM on 08/22/2012
People have become very controlling of other people and I believe it is an offshoot of the diabolical control exercised over most of us by our employers and by our government. Monkey see, monkey do.
photo
BluePhantom2
The Blacksmith & the Artist reflected in their art
07:27 PM on 08/22/2012
Thats some good stuff there! See you in Nov.
zinxeb
Empathy ends cruelty
06:06 PM on 08/22/2012
I'm sorry to disagree with you, Mr. Lux, but the problem with the neocon party and their lunatic fringe base didn't spring up in 2010, with the rise of the tea party...neocons have been infiltrating our government and poisoning their base's mind since the 60s...when Democrats strongly opposed to LBJ's Great Society plan decided to "convert" the south to neoconservatism.

Democrats, and especially Liberals, did not say "boo" lest they be called Communists...shades of the good old days of McCarthyism, and they're paying the price for it now that neocons have worked hard to "dumb down" their base all of these years, and have now taken over state and local governments...and school boards...and all they need now is another four or eight year term to max out the Federal credit card again for a few trillions of dollars of more debt and make our government so weak and small that it can be "drowned in a bathtub"!
05:46 PM on 08/22/2012
To say that Akin and King mis-spoke is kaa-kee-poo-poo! The trepub legislatures in over two dozen states have passed restrictive bills on abortion access. Over 100 bills! Mis-spoke, I don't think so.