John Thompson, historian and retired teacher in Oklahoma, reviews Dana Milbank’s new book about the crackup of the Republican Party. As I have often said, Milbank is my favorite columnist in the Washington Post.
Thompson writes:
Dana Milbank’s The Destructionists: The Twenty-Five-Year Crack-Up of the Republican Party is based on his quarter of a century of political reporting. From 1992 to the present the Republicans won the popular vote only once. There were calls for diversity in their party in order to reach more voters, but it went in the opposite direction. In the 1990s, the false and polarizing propaganda of Rush Limbaugh, G. Gordon Liddy, Sean Hannity, and Fox News took off, as Newt Gingrich became the key political driver of an ideology that would dismantle legislative norms and institutions.
This piece only has room for a brief overview of the 90s. I assume that readers will see and will be shocked by the cruelty and lies of that decade, and how they foreshadow today’s assaults on democracy.
Milbank starts with the suicide of the Clintons’ aide, Vince Foster. Rush Limbaugh, who called the 13-year-old Chelsea Clinton “the White House dog,” claimed, “Foster was murdered in an apartment owned by Hillary Clinton.”
The prime donor of Gingrich’s political training organization, the Global Organization of Parliamentarians Against Corruption (GOPAC) was Mellon Scaife. Scaife then joined with Christopher Ruddy, who would become Donald Trump’s friend and informal advisor, to found Newsmax. They said Vince Foster’s death showed that Bill Clinton “can order people done away with … God there must be 60 people who have died mysteriously.” (By the way, such words didn’t keep Oklahoma Governor Frank Keating or Congressman J.C. Watts from helping to lead GOPAC.)
Brett Kavanaugh, who assisted in Ken Starr’s investigations of Bill Clinton and helped draft the Starr Report, knew as early as 1995 that “I am satisfied that Foster was sufficiently discouraged or depressed to commit suicide.” But he spent two years investigating, thus legitimizing, what Milbank called “all of the ludicrous claims.” In Kavanaugh’s files, that were released two decades later, were 195 pages of articles by Ruddy and Limbaugh’s transcript on the case.
Milbank writes that once Gingrich became Speaker of House in 1995, he “threw the weight of the speakership behind the Foster conspiracy theory.” That year, Ruddy, Scaife and Newsmax, would spread the lies further.
(By 2016, Rep. Pete Olson said that Bill Clinton admitted to A.G. Loretta Lynch that “we killed Vince Foster.” And Trump said the charges that Foster was murdered are “very serious.” And Milbank concluded that Justice Kavanaugh was not the most ideological of the Supreme Court’s majority, but he was the most political.)
Milbank explains how rightwingers encouraged violence. After the Waco tragedy of 1993, G. Gordon Liddy said of the ATF agents, “Kill the son-of-a-bitches.” Sen. Jesse Helms said “Mr. Clinton better watch his guard if he comes down here (North Carolina). He’d better have a bodyguard.”
Moreover, even though the Fish and Wildlife Department didn’t have helicopters, Rep. Helen Chenoweth said they were “sending armed agency officials and helicopters” to enforce regulations and “if they didn’t stop, I will be their “worst nightmare.”
In 1995, the Oklahoma City bombing of the Murrah Building killed 168 people; Timothy McVeigh said his terrorist act was designed “to put a check on government abuse of power.” But some rightwingers claimed the bombing “was really a botched plot” by the FBI.
Also, Limbaugh asserted, “President Clinton’s ties to the domestic terrorism of Oklahoma City are tangible.” And Gingrich responded by defending the “genuine fears” of rural America regarding the federal government, and doubled down on repealing of the assault weapons ban.
Milbank goes into detail recounting how Gingrich “changed forever the language of politics.” Gingrich quoted Mao saying, “Politics is war without blood.” And he repeatedly made charges such as the Democrats “‘trash’ America, indict the president and give the benefit of every doubt to Marxist regimes.”
In 1977, a year before Gingrich was first elected, Milbank reports that a Gallup poll found that 40% of Americans had “a great deal” or “quite a lot” of confidence in Congress. After 15 years of his “relentless” attacks, that number was down to 18%. Gingrich then undermined congressional norms that encouraged compromise and constructive actions. During his legislative career, committee and sub-committee meetings dropped by nearly half. By 2017, they had dropped by almost 75%. The ability of Presidents to get laws passed was also undermined. Presidents’ legislative victories dropped from 73% of the agenda under Nixon. At the beginning of the Clinton term, he had a victory rate of 87% but by 2016, President Obama’s rate was 13%.
Another pivotal change occurred after the 1996 defeat of Bob Dole. Republican aide Margaret Tutwiler said, “We’re going to have to take on [board] the religious nuts.” A couple of decades later, White evangelicals were only 15% of the US population but about 40% of Trump’s voters.
And with the arrival of Karl Rove’s anti-gay “whisper campaign” against George W. Bush’s opponent, Ann Richards, personal attacks escalated dramatically. Another example of campaign lies was the attack on Sen. John McCain’s mental stability, and the claim he had “fathered an illegitimate black child.” Actually McCain had adopted a daughter from a Bangladesh orphanage.
Although I had been horrified by the behaviors of the rightwing, Milbank’s details provided me a much better understanding of how the views I’ve held allowed me to remain excessively optimistic. I used to believe that it was deindustrialization and the loss of economic opportunity (accelerated by Reagan’s job-killing Supply Side economics) that mostly fed the racism which propelled Trump into the White House. Now I’m convinced by Milbank’s evidence that it was racism – not economics – that spurred Trumpism.
Also, I had misremembered Mitch McConnell’s record in the 1990s. In 1993, McConnell joined Strom Thurmond and Jesse Helms in defending the Confederate flag on the Senate floor, saying, “My roots … run deep in the Southern part of the country.” And he stood before a huge Confederate flag at a meeting of the Sons of Confederate Veterans.
In 1997, McConnell said in a fundraising letter, “Help to protect our country from a potentially devastating nuclear attack.” And he alleged, Clinton’s White House was “sold for ILLEGAL FOREIGN CASH”
I’m assuming that readers of this blog will quickly understand how the Alt Facts spread by politicians like Gingrich are linked to today’s crises. By 2018, only 16% of Republicans trusted the media over Trump. In 2020, people who said they were “very happy” dropped to 14% compared to the previous low of 29%.
Two years later, the attempted kidnapping of Gov. Gretchen Whitmer showed how the worsening rhetoric was putting people in danger. In 2019, hate crimes increased by 30%, and over 18 months in 2020 and 2021, the FBI nearly tripled its domestic terrorism caseload. FBI director Christopher Wray said, “The violence in 2020 is unlike what we’ve seen in quite some time.” And who knows what the numbers are in the wake of Trump’s response to the subpoenaing of the Secret documents?
The 25-year rightwing siege and Trumpism has put our democracy at risk. Being from Oklahoma City, I’m increasingly worried about the chances of bloodshed. And I’m doubly concerned after reading The Destructionists.
In 1994, Vice President Al Gore explained, “The Republicans are determined to wreck Congress in order to control it – and then wreck a presidency in order to recapture it.” Now, Milbank concludes. “A quarter century after a truck bomb set by an antigovernment extremist … Republicans have lit a fuse on democracy itself.”
How The Republican Party Lost it’s Soul
Like Faust, they made a deal
With Satan, an appeal
For power and for glory
An age-old, oft-told story
Faust at least bargained for knowledge. They bargained for, embraced ignorance.
“Now I am convinced that it was racism that spurred Trumpism.”
The documentary “Zero Tolerance, by the PBS investigative program Frontline, makes this completely clear. It describes in detail how in 2014-15, Jeff Sessions, Stephen Miller, and Steve Bannon looked around for a candidate who would carry their white supremacist, anti-immigrant agenda forward and then settled on and anointed Trump because of his clearly racist history–his and his father’s refusal to rent to black people, his taking out a full-page ad in the New York Times calling for the death penalty for the Central Park Five (who were exonerated by DNA evidence), his leadership of the birther conspiracy theory, and so on. PLEASE go watch this. It’s extraordinarily revealing and a truly great piece of journalism.
https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/frontline/documentary/zero-tolerance/
And Newt, yeah, what a piece of slime. I don’t think him as evolved, though, as his namesakes are.
Gingrich. The answer to the question, How can a newt be a snake?
And a weasel, and a skunk and a rat and a cockroach and a scorpion and a black widow and so many other creep crawly things.
Newt is a shape shifter,for sure.
Despite all of this Gingrich still gets air time. His claim that the IRS will be wolves at the door ready to devour middle America is not only deplorable, yes he is certainly one of those referred to accurately by Hillary, but worse than yelling fire in a crowded theater.
Gingrich not only yells fire in a crowded theater, he also hurls Molotov cocktails in a crowded theater. The man is an ideological arsonist.
An R-sonist
“In the 1990s, the false and polarizing propaganda of Rush Limbaugh, G. Gordon Liddy, Sean Hannity, and Fox News took off, as Newt Gingrich became the key political driver of an ideology that would dismantle legislative norms and institutions.”
Without Presidents Reagan and the first Bush, this would have never happened.
It was Reagan that got rid of The Fairness Doctrine and the 1st Bush that made sure it stayed gone.
“How Rush Limbaugh’s rise after the gutting of the fairness doctrine led to today’s highly partisan media
“Limbaugh’s success after President Reagan declawed the doctrine gave rise to others and provided encouragement for Fox News’ 1996 launch.”
https://www.poynter.org/reporting-editing/2021/how-rush-limbaughs-rise-after-the-gutting-of-the-fairness-doctrine-led-to-todays-highly-partisan-media/
Seriously why start in 92. Nixon’s southern strategy was 1968. But since 1954 the parties were re-aligning. By the time Goldwater ran on race!, pro civil rights moderates like Rockefeller were being booed off of the stage at the 64, RNC. Dixiecrats switching parties in droves from 64 on. And White Nationalist anti Government militias and racism surging in the 70s.
But it pre dates Brown, forcing “them there Southern (or Northern )White Boys ” into integrated units was Truman in 48 . Brown just added gas to the fire . While LBJ was the breaking point . A fire accelerated during Vietnam.
Catering to the worst of our impulses was the Faustian bargain corporate America made in their ongoing effort to keep the government off their backs. Apparently it’s worked.
I think we have to acknowledge that a significant part of the population is racist. They love Black athletes but…not next door, not in their kid’s school.
This explains a lot about Newt. He wants rules of the jungle to apply to political life. One gets the feeling Newt was picked on a lot in school and has spent the remainder of his sad life seeking retribution against a system that he perceives never gave him his due. Why are Russia RepubliQans so opposed to humanism and civilization?
https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2018/11/newt-gingrich-says-youre-welcome/570832/
When they turned Gingrich into a Newt he never got better…
Conservative Catholics and Christians think the GOP party has found its soul.
As example, Trump selected Paul Huck Jr., who has very close ties to the Federalist Society, to be his special master choice.
Huck is married to Barbara Lagoda. She was 2nd to Amy Coney Barrett as Trump’s choice for SCOTUS. Similar to Barrett, Lagota is a pro-life Catholic.
DeSantis appointed Lagota to the Florida Supreme Court.