Heather Cox Richardson points out that the Republican Party has been captured by its most extreme members, who hope to roll back the laws to enshrine the power of white men. At the same time that they vote against Biden’s legislation, they take credit for what it does for their states. She watched Biden’s rally in Detroit and was impressed, as was I, by his slashing critique of Trump and his vision for the future.
She writes:
Representative Glenn Grothman (R-WI) said yesterday that if Trump wins reelection, the U.S. should work its way back to 1960, before “the angry feminist movement…took the purpose out of the man’s life.” Grothman said that President Lyndon Baines Johnson’s War on Poverty was actually a “war on marriage,” in a communist attempt to hand control of children over to the government.
Grothman was waxing nostalgic for a fantasy past when laws and society discriminated against women, who could not get credit cards in their own name until 1974—meaning that, among other things, they could not build credit scores to borrow money on their own—and who were forced into dependence on men. The 1960 date Grothman chose was notable in another way, too: it was before the 1964 Civil Rights Act and the 1965 Voting Rights Act with which Congress tried to make the racial equality promised in the 1868 Fourteenth Amendment and the voting rights promised in the 1870 Fifteenth Amendment become real.
At stake in Grothman’s erasure of the last sixty years is the equality of women and minorities to the white men who previously exercised virtually complete control of American society. That equality translates into a struggle over the nature of the American government. Since the 1870s, during the reconstruction of the American government after the Civil War, white reactionaries insisted that opening the vote to anyone but white men would result in socialism.
Their argument was that poor voters—by which they meant Black men—would elect leaders who would promise them roads and schools and hospitals, and so on. Those public benefits could be paid for only with tax levies, and since white men held most of the property in the country in those days, they insisted such benefits amounted to a redistribution of wealth from hardworking white men to undeserving Black Americans, even though poor white people would benefit from those public works as much as or more than Black people did.
This argument resurfaced after World War II as an argument against Black and Brown voting and, in the 1970s, against the electoral power of “women’s libbers,” that is, women who called for the federal government to protect the rights of women equally to those of men. Beginning in 1980, when Republican presidential candidate Ronald Reagan called for rolling back the government regulations and social safety net that underpinned society, a gap appeared in voting behavior. Women, especially Black women, tended to back the Democrats, while men moved toward Republican candidates. Increasingly, Republican leaders used racist and sexist tropes to undermine the active government whose business regulations they hated.
For the radical extremists who have taken over the Republican Party, getting rid of the modern government that regulates business, provides a basic social safety net, promotes infrastructure, and protects civil rights is now gospel as they try to replace it with Christian nationalism. But that active government remains popular.
That popularity was reflected today as Republicans continued to take credit for laws passed by Democrats to maintain or expand an active government. In Tennessee, Republican Governor Bill Lee boasted that the state had “secured historic funding to modernize Memphis infrastructure with the single-largest transportation investment in state history.” All the Republicans in the Tennessee delegation opposed the measure, leaving Democratic representative Steve Cohen to provide the state’s only yes vote. Indeed, Tennessee senator Marsha Blackburn posted on social media that “Americans do not want [Biden’s] ‘socialist Build Back Broke’ plan.”
In Alabama, Senator Tommy Tuberville boasted about a bridge project funded by a $550 million Department of Transportation grant, writing: “Since I took office, I have been working to secure funding for the Mobile bridge and get this project underway.” But as Representative Terri Sewell, an Alabama Democrat, pointed out, Tuberville voted against the bill that provided the money.
Like Governor Lee and Senator Blackburn, Tuberville knows such government policies are enormously popular and so takes credit for them, even while voting against them.
Union workers also historically have supported a government that regulates business and provides a social safety net and infrastructure investment, but those workers turned to Reagan in 1980 and have tended to make their home in the Republican Party ever since. Now they appear to be shifting back.
Today the president of the 600,000-member International Association of Machinist and Aerospace Workers urged Biden to stay in the race, writing: “For the first time in decades, we have an Administration that has leveled the playing field for workers trying to organize. The IAM is one of the fastest growing unions in the labor movement because we have a President who goes toe to toe with corporations on behalf of working people.”
Union president Brian Bryant noted that Biden “saved hundreds of thousands of our members’ jobs” and thanked him for “strengthen[ing] the Buy American regulations that have helped to create millions of jobs, including nearly 800,000 in manufacturing.” Bryant also credited Biden with helping to save 83 pension plans that covered more than a million workers and retirees. Bryant noted that “[i]n the IAM, we value seniority.”
United Auto Workers president Shawn Fain told Netroots Nation today that “humanity is at stake” in the 2024 election. “This has everything to do with our shot at life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. Our wages. Having health care. Our retirement security, and our time…. Those are the four core issues that unite the entire working-class people in a fight against the billionaire class as we saw in our contract campaign last fall when 75% of Americans supported us in that fight, for those reasons.”
“The dream and the scheme of a man like Donald Trump is that the vast majority of working-class people, who literally make our country run, will remain divided. That’s how they win. They want us to not unite in a common cause to take on the billionaire class…. They divide us by race. They divide us by gender, by who we love. They divide us by what language we speak or where we were born….”
Today, in Detroit, in a barnburner of a speech, President Joe Biden pitched his plan for the first 100 days of a second term with a Democratic Congress. He promised to restore Roe v. Wade, eliminate medical debt, raise the minimum wage, protect workers’ right to organize, ban assault weapons, and to “keep leading the world” on clean energy and addressing climate change. He also vowed to sign into law the John Lewis Voting Rights Act, which would end voter suppression, and the Freedom to Vote Act, which would protect voter rights and election systems, as well as end partisan gerrymandering.
Biden forcefully contrasted his own record with Trump’s. He reminded the audience that he was the first president to walk a picket line, because “when labor does well, everybody does well.” “When Trump comes here to tell you how great he is for the auto industry, remember this: when Trump was president we lost 86,000 jobs in unions. I created 275,000 auto jobs in America. In fact, what’s been true in the auto industry is true all over America: since I became president, we created nearly 16 million new jobs nationwide, 390,000 of those jobs right here in Michigan. We’ve created 800,000 manufacturing jobs nationwide, including 24,000 in Michigan.”
Biden hammered Trump, saying “no more free passes.” He reminded that audience that Trump is a convicted criminal and that a judge had found him liable for sexual abuse. Biden quoted the judge: “Mr. Trump raped her.” Biden reminded the audience that Trump lost his license to do business in New York state and is still facing criminal charges for retaining classified documents and trying to overturn the results of the 2020 presidential election, as well as charges in Georgia for election interference. Biden said: “It’s time for us to stop treating politics like entertainment and reality TV.”
Today the European Union charged Trump donor Elon Musk’s social media company X, formerly Twitter, for failing to curb disinformation and illegal hate speech.
Also today, a judge ruled that Trump ally Rudy Giuliani is not entitled to bankruptcy protection. The judge cited Giuliani’s “lack of financial transparency” and noted that Giuliani “has engaged in self-dealing.” This decision means that election workers Ruby Freeman and Shaye Moss, as well as other creditors, are free to collect what they can of the $150 million he owes them. A lawyer for the two said: “We’re pleased the Court saw through Mr. Giuliani’s games and put a stop to his abuse of the bankruptcy proceeding. We will move forward as quickly as possible to begin enforcing our judgment against him.”
Meanwhile, Trump appeared to be trying to recapture attention by teasing an unveiling of his vice presidential nominee at next week’s Republican National Convention. He compared the selection process to “a highly sophisticated version of The Apprentice,” the reality TV show in which he appeared before he became president, and which centered around firing people.

For everybody who wants Biden to step aside now, there are several things Richardson talks about that are pertinent to the consideration of the matter.
Note that the people who are calling out Republicans who opposed Build Back legislation but now want to take credit for it are local people, who stand to make some political hay of their own regardless of whatever coattails might exist. When Tennessee’s extremists are called out for their hypocrisy, there are people who will read this and someday defend democracy. It is Alabama that has the responsibility to unseat Turberville, and not Biden.
I have suggested that Biden’s run for the presidency has to do with the toxic environment radical Republican media create every time a Democrat gets popular.
From the Wall Street Journal, quoting a California Representative:
“If you’re getting attacked, it means you matter and you’re scaring someone,” Rep. Ro Khanna (D., Calif.) said of the increased Republican focus on Harris. “I just think that that’s inevitable, but it’s also one of the reasons that we should be cautious of just putting someone new in the current media landscape. It is a risk, and that’s why I think the president is clearly running again.”
All of the worry about Biden’s fitness has completely erased Trump from the headlines. Now the visitation of the Radical Right Wing in Nashville, which emerged from uhaul trucks to place graffiti on bridges even has earned the condemnation of Governor Lee, who initially remained silent on the matter. His silence was evidence that the Republicans in my state need the vote of people who sympathize with Nazis.
We will not, in Tennessee, get rid of all these idiots this cycle, but the Republicans can see the handwriting on the wall. You can bet the John Lewis Act is dead to Tennesseans right now, but political resurrection is real.
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Their hopes to turn back time is doomed. Consider the folloiwng issues:
The Republicans in the adminsitration can try and twist and turn whichever way they like. The problem they are not ready for is that Americans en mass cannot be controlled by law, force or intimidation.
They are not ready for the backlash, which may be slow to start but will build up a momentum.
It’s happened elsewhere in the world, the USA is not unique. The Right is just not ready.
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What % of women will vote for a party determined to ban abortion, abortion pills and perhaps contraception?
How far back can the GOP turn the clock?
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I think it is worth considering that there are Republican women who believe that they will always be able to get abortions if they or their family members need them, because they have the financial means to pay for them as well as pay to keep that information buried.
They don’t think that the measures advocated by the most extreme elements will ever apply to them. They really are not concerned about women whose lives would be blighted by the inability to terminate a pregnancy that isn’t viable, or that endangers their health.
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It will try, badly of course, and there is the tragedy.
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One of the reasons our income inequality has become so extreme is because the last fifty years following neoliberal policies have hollowed out the middle class. Globalization of the economy and the loss of manufacturing have taken a toll. While both parties are responsible, Biden is the first president that has tried to change course, and he has shaken the billionaires and corporations with his support for unions and antitrust actions. Big money does not smile a working class guy from Scranton that wants to rebuild the middle class. Michigan, with chants of four more years, appreciates what Biden has done for them. With a second term and a better balance in Congress, Biden would be able expand on policies that will provide good paying jobs for working families.
The GOP is the party of big money and angry white guys. Project 2025 outlines their devastating extractive social and economic plans. The document is a litany of regressive, restrictive policies that promotes the interests of wealthy men at the expense of everyone else. In addition to the deliberate suppression of several key groups in our country, it is a plan that continues the economic extraction from the working class and economic gain for the super-wealthy and corporations. Biden poses a threat to the status quo, and it is a good thing. We should reject ageism and stand up for the guy that wants to make our lives better. The alternative is too dire to consider.
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This this this! Thank you for this perfect response and I don’t understand how anyone can disagree!
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“Representative Glenn Grothman (R-WI) said yesterday that if Trump wins reelection, the U.S. should work its way back to 1960, before ‘the angry feminist movement…took the purpose out of the man’s life.’”
Classic Margaret Atwood–right out of “The Handmaid’s Tale.” Can Grothman even imagine WHY women were so angry?
Also, when Trump was shot, it sent me into a really dark place where I was imagining who the GOP would run in his place if he died . . . CBK
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