National Journal
 
 
Is the GOP Moving to the Center? Or Just Getting Sane?
Capitulation on debt ceiling and immigration suggests the GOP  is eyeing 
the vacuum created by Obama's move leftward.

 
 
By _Ron Fournier_ (http://www.nationaljournal.com/reporters/bio/13)  
Updated: January 24, 2013

 
 
It is no secret that President Obama plans to move the country to the left, 
 demanding "collective action" in his Inaugural Address to curb global 
warming,  buttress the middle class, regulate guns and ammunition, defend 
Medicare and  Social Security, and extend gay rights. 
The question is whether, behind the scenes, Republican leaders have  
recognized an opportunity to counter Obama’s liberalism with ever-so-slight 
jogs  
toward the center – if not ideologically, at least pragmatically, to a 
position  the GOP all but abandoned in recent months: political sanity. 
I ask because of two important developments: 
    *   The GOP-controlled House passed a bill Wednesday that effectively 
extends  the debt ceiling limit until May 19. It was a major capitulation to 
Obama, who  publicly declared he would not negotiate with the nation’s 
credit held  hostage. Rep. Paul Ryan, the party’s vice presidential nominee in 
2012, cited  the “realities of divided government” when he urged his rank and 
file to  effectively eat crow. 
    *   Sen. Marco Rubio of Florida, another likely 2016 GOP presidential  
candidate, is quietly and (so far) effectively lobbying conservative 
lawmakers  and commentators to consider immigration reforms. In the 
not-to-distant 
past,  Rubio’s proposals would have been fatally labeled as stalking horses 
for  amnesty.  
    *   Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal is expected to tell the Republican 
National  Committee tonight that it's time for the GOP to focus less on 
political  battles in Washington. "A debate about which party can better manage 
the  
federal government is a very small and shortsighted debate," he is expected 
to  say, according to the _The  Washington Post_ 
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/the-fix/wp/2013/01/24/bobby-jindal-speaking-truth-to-gop-power/?hp
id=z2) . "If our vision is not bigger than that, we do not  deserve to win."
If these developments don’t represent a tentative step to the center, they  
are at least deep bows to reality. Polls showed that the public was braced 
to  blame Republicans for any economic fallout over a debt-ceiling fight. 
Election  results from November underscored the GOP’s existential image 
problem in the  fast-growing Hispanic community. 
There could be something else going on here: If Obama overestimates the  
amount of political capital he collected upon reelection (a common mistake for 
 second-term presidents), he might go to far with his liberal agenda, 
alienate  moderate and independent voters, and leave a vacuum for Republicans 
in 
the  middle. 
Yes, Republicans in the middle. It could happen. 
In making the rounds on Capitol Hill, I’ve been struck by the recognition  
among GOP lawmakers that their party must adapt or perish. Some paint a 
broader  picture, pointing out that both political parties need to be better 
attuned to  the public will. 
“The American people are not fearful of solutions to the big problems 
facing  our country,” said Rep. Charlie Dent, R-Pa. “They are fearful that 
American  leaders don’t have the capacity to act.” 
Failure to respond to issues such as the national debt, Dent said, could  
force voters to seek alternatives, even an independent presidential bid. 
Citing  the organic creation of the tea-party revolt, Dent ominously added, 
“The 
next  movement to come along might not align itself with one of the two 
existing  parties.”

-- 
-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org



Reply via email to