>From margins to mainstream: the rise of Rush, Sarah and gang


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by: Sam Webb
September 10 2010

tags: ultra-right, elections, GOP, Republicans, racism, strategy and tactics

Let me begin with an obvious point: Right wing extremism is gathering
strength and becoming more extreme.

Someone recently said with no hint of exaggeration that Rush Limbaugh
and other like-minded, turbo-charged extremists are no longer on the
fringe of the Republican Party, but comfortably nestle in its
mainstream and shape its policies.

Both Ronald Reagan and George W. Bush possessed a conservative cast of
mind to be sure, but this new right-wing gang is more reactionary and
authoritarian, if you can believe it, than the two former presidents.

The political DNA of this grouping isn't fascistic for now, but one
can't rule out such an evolution, given ongoing crisis conditions and
intensifying struggles.

In any case, their growing voice in Republican circles re-positions
the GOP further to the right and endangers to the extreme democracy
and progress.

For doubters of the new status and influence of these former upstarts
in elite Republican circles, a few examples will hopefully suffice to
make my point:

• The defeat of the Republican Senate incumbent Lisa Murkowski in the
Alaska primary by a tea party candidate.

• The rush to the extreme right by John McCain in his senatorial primary.

• The prominence and power broker status of Sarah Palin, Rush
Limbaugh, and Fox News.

• The growing strength and insider status of the tea party in the
workings of the GOP.

• The growing notoriety of Glenn Beck.

•  The surprising number of people who think the president is neither
a Christian nor a citizen.



This march from the margins to mainstream by these amplifiers of hate,
lies, resentment and unapologetic racism should compel us to rethink
the coming elections and their importance.

If anyone thought they were routine, they aren't. If anyone believed
that they could be reduced to simply another round of the election
cycle, they can't. If anyone believes that anything else is more
important at this moment, they're wrong.

As I see it, if the Republican Party, weighted now in a more
reactionary and authoritarian direction, gains control of the House
and gathers momentum going into the 2012 elections, stormy days and
difficult times are ahead not only for the Obama administration and
the Democrats in Congress, but also for the American people, already
locked into a protracted and deep economic crisis.

The terrain, on which they will fight, will no longer tilt in their
favor. They will be running uphill. Their hopes of democratic and
progressive advance will be much dimmer. And the window of opportunity
that opened up in 2008 will be nearly shut. For how long, no one
knows.

I can hear someone saying that if this occurs, the fault lies squarely
with the president and his party. This is simplistic, if not outright
wrong.

First of all, it ignores that the ruling class has swung decisively
and overwhelmingly to the right-wing-dominated GOP in recent months.

It also is blind to the outsized role of the most extreme right-wing
groupings in the mass media and their ability to use - racism, the
"war on terror," male supremacy, nativism, xenophobia, homophobia,
selective historical memory, anti-socialism, anti-communism, red
baiting, and the nostalgia of an idealized past - to create fear,
confusion and division among tens of millions. While the right lost
its grip on the presidency and Congress two years ago, the impact of
its ideas on popular thinking didn't simply disappear.

Nor does this political calculus (Obama is to blame) include the
institutional weight and logic of a state (which includes more than
representative institutions and the presidency) that resist
progressive change.

Finally, it underestimates the gathering strength of Limbaugh and gang
on the Republican Party and national politics.

Accounting for the above necessarily complicates the process of change
as well as brings into sharper focus the old and new pressures for an
anti-democratic, authoritarian, militarist solution to the current
crisis.

But - and this is a big but - such an extremist solution becomes
possible only if the Republican right (now on steroids thanks to the
mainstreaming of Rush, Sarah, and crowd) is able to regain control of
the Congress this fall and the presidency in 2012.

Said differently, the winning of the levers of executive and
congressional power in this and the next national election is a
necessary condition, if the newest version of the extreme right is to
ruthlessly restructure the state and economy in favor of the top
layers of the capitalist class.

Against this background, the Nov. 2 elections and the presidential
elections in two years acquire a new and overriding urgency.

Frustration with the pace and depth of change is understandable on the
part of the American people. After all, it's hard to be sober minded
when you are out of a job or can't pay for groceries and medical care
or face eviction from the home that you lived in your entire adult
life.

And yet letting anger and frustration substitute for a well reasoned
action plan to meet present and future challenges is akin to shooting
yourself in the foot.

As we know in our personal lives, venting at an immediate target - a
friend, a spouse, a family member, a co-worker - is, at best, a
temporary fix to what usually is a much deeper problem requiring a
more objective approach.

This is so in politics too. An objective class analysis is needed to
gauge the balance of political power between contending groups, shine
a light on who and what is blocking social progress, and identify the
political forces that require further assembling if the country is to
overcome the current crisis in way that favors working people and
their allies.

Impatience and misdirected frustration (and I would add political
generalities and sloganeering) will not cut the mustard in this
regard; what they might do is cut our throats, figuratively speaking.

The point of politics isn't to embrace the world as we want it to be,
but the world as it is, a world filled with contradictions and
complexities ... and then figure out a path to expanded democracy,
economic security, and a new burst of peace and freedom.

To be more concrete, the struggle to defeat the newest and more
dangerous edition of right-wing extremism at the ballot box in
November is the key link to open new vistas of freedom in every field
of struggle - jobs, housing, public education, equality, peace and
nuclear disarmament, environmental sustainability, democratic rights,
and so forth.

The time to fight juiced-up, right-wing extremism is now when it still
doesn't control every lever of political power, not later when it
does. And the immediate place to fight it is at the ballot box in
November.

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