Okay, I guess that depends in part on how you define “ideas.”
Donald Trump has proposed shooting shoplifters, as NBC News noted in a report on GOP “bloodlust.” Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis has pledged to kill drug smugglers who cross the Mexican border. Former South Carolina governor Nikki Haley, in more organized fashion, proposed sending Special Forces into Mexico to go after drug cartels. Oh, and DeSantis said last August that he wanted to “slit the throats” of federal bureaucrats on Day 1 of his administration. But don’t be alarmed, civil servants. He explained later that he was “being colorful.”
If killing various kinds of people is a legitimate solution for various problems, then sure, the party’s presidential candidates have plenty of policies to offer.
Occasionally, the party’s hopefuls go beyond vague but sweeping calls for cuts in government spending to spar about something substantive. At a debate earlier this month, Haley proposed raising the retirement age for younger workers, while DeSantis said he wouldn’t. Some deficit hawks will no doubt cheer Haley, but there’s nothing pathbreaking about this argument.
Beyond that, the party is offering little in the way of problem-solving and policy innovation. Culture war battle cries and symbolism are the order of the day.
Sure, you can scoff that looking for new ideas in campaigns reflects a civics textbook form of naiveté. Or you might say that yearning for policy ideas reflects a liberal bias toward government efforts to solve problems. But it was not long ago that Republicans used campaigns to float serious proposals.
In his 2000 campaign, George W. Bush made accountability in education a big issue. This led to the “No Child Left Behind” law, which was controversial but also bipartisan. He backed and signed into law a prescription drug benefit under Medicare. He also made serious proposals on immigration reform. These were eventually killed by his own party, foreshadowing the Trump movement and its reluctance to endorse any solution outside of stronger borders and the inhumane treatment of migrants.
In the Obama years, a group of conservative intellectuals launched another venture into the new ideas market. The “Reformicons,” as in reform conservatives, acknowledged the rise of inequality, the need for government help to families struggling in a complicated economy and initiatives to strengthen local community life. Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) gave some surprising speeches on inequality’s costs.
But the Reformicons were fighting the always powerful small-government forces in the party and were preempted by Trump’s appeals to the White working class and his break with free-trade orthodoxy. Trump, to put matters gently, never fully developed his ideas and has been far more enthusiastic about nativism, election denial and promises of revenge against his enemies. Oh yes, and his party didn’t even issue a platform in 2020.
American Compass and the Niskanen Center, relatively new and productive center-right think tanks, have picked up where the Reformicons left off. But neither House Republicans nor the presidential field have taken much advantage of what they have to offer.
This reflects the deeper GOP problem: Its long march away from policy, detailed early on by political scientists Thomas E. Mann and Norman J. Ornstein in their appropriately entitled 2012 book “It’s Even Worse Than It Looks.” In 2020, political writer Steve Benen argued in “The Impostors” that Republicans were “tethered to few, if any, meaningful policy preferences” and had become “a post-policy party.”
Seeing the GOP this way helps explain the ongoing chaos in the House and its focus on petty proposals, such as reducing the annual salaries of Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin III and Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg to $1. (Fortunately, there’s little chance these and comparable pay cuts will make it into law.)
Or consider the three amendments introduced last week by Rep. Bob Good (R-Va.) before the House finally voted to avoid a government shutdown. They would have cut funding for small federal health programs focused largely on improving minority health outcomes. The amendments failed because enough Republicans recognized the terrible message they sent, but they’re emblematic of where many GOP heads are these days.
Meanwhile, Republican presidential candidates have little of substance to say about passing a budget (unless you count Trump’s occasional calls for a shutdown). In their debates, there has been the occasional shout-out to this or that tax cut, but the non-Trump contenders regularly swing back to ways of discussing the evils of China and all manner of paths to militarize, seal, cauterize and otherwise close the southern border.
It doesn’t help the conversation that Trump (shrewdly from his point of view) has skipped the debates. But the reluctance of his rivals — other than Chris Christie — to take him on substantively reinforces the hollowness of the contest.
It’s the primary campaign where ideas go to die.
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