Dear Republicans: Your toe tags are ready
P.M. Carpenter 
THE FIFTH COLUMNIST by P.M. Carpenter



It was yesterday, midafternoon as I recall, and I almost noted the time, like a 
physician in an emergency room registering for the ages a terminal patient's 
last minute on Earth. Because there I was, face to face with a Jack Cafferty 
diagnosis for the Republican Party, which, Jack had written on a 
CNNPolitics.com chart, "is becoming a cartoon."

I confess I don't watch Mr. Cafferty; for that matter I don't watch CNN, 
excepting Fareed Zakaria's excellent geopolitical romp every Sunday afternoon. 
But I do recall having watched him in years past, and a more curmudgeonly, 
old-school conservative coot one would have been hard-pressed to find. 

Yet there he was, online, ridiculing the Grand Old Party as cartoonish. That 
struck me -- emotionally, not intellectually -- as lights out. If Jack Cafferty 
thinks the Republican Party is a joke, then it's probably worse than that: it's 
probably toast. I almost threw a sheet over the laptop.

Given the epic banality of CNN, Mr. Cafferty's reasoning was scandalously 
intelligent. First, he wrote, the party's leading personnel is a farce: Bobby 
Jindal is an "embarrassment"; Sarah Palin is "tawdry"; Michael Steele, 
"pathetic" -- "down on his knees apologizing to the helium-filled poster boy of 
the conservative right," by whom Cafferty meant, of course, the inflammatorily 
gaseous Rush Limbaugh.

Cafferty's disgust, however, went deeper than vis-a-vis those surface faces, 
who are, after all, but the empty-suit phenomena of the GOP's astonishing 
vacuity. "If the Republicans are ever to emerge from the long dark night they 
have created for themselves," he observed, "it will have to be without 
pandering to the right wing nuts that comprise [the Limbaugh-infested] radio 
audience," not to mention they're "blowing it big time" by "go[ing] blithely 
along as though nothing has happened." 

In closing -- in Cafferty's own pulling over of the sheet -- he whipped out the 
i-word: "The Republican Party is marching double-time down the road to 
irrelevance and they don't even know it." My emphasis, his prognosis 

As I said, it was the source that startled, not the conclusion. For if the 
party of Reagan has lost its angry-white-guy Jack Caffertys, then the party of 
Reagan is, simply, a lost cause. 

I also confess I may have been a trifle oversensitive to Cafferty's scribbled 
obituary, or near obituary, since moments earlier I had read the latest dirge 
from the NYT's David Brooks, whose political peregrination in record time has 
sped from unabashed Republican to reconfirmed Burkean conservative to, now, 
plain old moderate. 

I almost felt sorry for him, this expatriate of the betrayed Cause. His 
frustration positively oozed: How in God's name can Republicans be so "totally 
misguided"; why in God's name can't they "embrace an entirely different 
approach"? 

Brooks even wrote out a sensible prescription to treat the GOP's seemingly 
terminal stupidity; he itemized at least a five-step political recovery plan, 
ranging from an informed focus on economics to "mak[ing] it clear that the 
emergency has to be followed by an era of [fiscal] balance." Did you catch that 
verbal phrase? -- "has to be followed by." That was the informed part.

His closing, like Cafferty's, invoked the lugubrious chuckle: "Do I expect them 
to shift course...? Not really." 

Here, Brooks had monumental reason for expressing a disgust that approached 
indifference. Because those zany Beltway Republicans demonstrated again just 
yesterday that they take their economics cues from no less than Grover 
Cleveland.

I happened to be watching MSNBC, when on popped Indiana's Mike Pence -- the 
chairman, mind you, of the House Republican Conference -- essentially endorsing 
minority leader John Boehner's shockingly ignorant thesis that in tough times 
like these, the federal government should -- have you heard? -- restrain 
spending. That's what the man said. Even more shocking, perhaps, was that the 
crack network interviewer failed to helplessly double over in appalled 
laughter. But that's another story.

The end of this one is that if Republicans don't regain some semblance of 
seriousness soon, then it will indeed be toe-tagging time for the Grand Old 
Party. 


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