By PATRICK J. BUCHANAN
Since 1928, only Dwight Eisenhower and George W. Bush
have won the presidency while capturing both houses of Congress for the
GOP. In his 49-state landslide, Richard Nixon failed to take
either House. In his two landslides, Ronald Reagan won back only the
Senate. Yet Mitt Romney is even money to pull off the hat trick.
With this hopeful prospect, why the near despair among so
many Republicans about the long term?
In his New York Times report, “In California, GOP Fights Steep Decline,” Adam Nagourney delves
into the reasons. In the Golden Land, a state Nixon carried all five times
he was on a national ticket and Reagan carried by landslides all
four times he ran, the GOP does not hold a single statewide office.
It gained not a single House seat in the 2010 landslide.
Party registration has fallen to 30 percent of the California electorate
and is steadily sinking.
Why?
It is said that California Republicans are too out of touch, too socially conservative on issues like right-to-life and gay rights. “When you look at the population growth,” says GOP consultant Steve Schmidt, “the actual party is shrinking. It’s becoming more white. It’s becoming older.” Race, age and ethnicity are at the heart of the problem. And they portend not only the party’s death in California, but perhaps its destiny in the rest of America.
Consider. Almost 90 percent of all Republican voters in presidential
elections are white. Almost 90 percent are Christians. But whites fell to
74 percent of the electorate in 2008 and were only 64 percent of the
population. Christians are down to 75 percent of the population from 85 in
1990. The falloff continues and is greatest among the young.
Consider ethnicity. Hispanics were 15 percent of the
U.S. population in 2008 and 7.4 percent of the electorate. Both
percentages will inexorably rise. Yet in their best years, like 2004,
Republicans lose the Hispanic vote 3-to-2. In bad years, like 2008, they
lose it 2-to-1. Whites are already a minority in California, and Hispanics
will eventually become the majority. Say goodbye to the Golden Land.
Asian-Americans voted 3-to-2 for Obama, black Americans 24-to-1.
The Asian population in California and the nation is growing rapidly. The
black population, 13 percent of the nation, is growing steadily.
Whites, already a minority in our two most populous states, will be
less than half the U.S. population by 2041 and a minority in 10 states by
2020.
Consider now the Electoral College picture. Of the seven
mega-states, California, New York and Illinois appear lost to the GOP.
Pennsylvania has not gone Republican since 1988. Ohio and Florida, both
crucial, are now swing states. Whites have become a minority in Texas.
When Texas goes, America goes. This year could be the last hurrah.
The GOP must work harder to win Hispanic votes, we are told. But
consider the home economics and self-interest of Hispanics. Half of all
U.S. wage-earners pay no income tax. Yet that half and their families
receive free education K-12, Medicaid, rent supplements, food stamps,
earned income tax credits, Pell grants, welfare payments, unemployment
checks and other benefits.
Why should poor, working- and middle-class Hispanics, the
vast majority, vote for a party that will reduce taxes they don’t pay,
but cut the benefits they do receive?
The majority of Latinos, African-Americans, immigrants and young
people 18 to 25 pay no income taxes yet enjoy a panoply of government
benefits. Does not self-interest dictate a vote for the party that will
let them keep what they have and perhaps give them more, rather than the
party that will pare back what they now receive?
What are the historic blunders of the Grand Old Party that may yet
appear on the autopsy report as probable causes of death?
First, the party, intimidated by name-calling, refused to stop a
tidal wave of immigration that brought 40 million people here
whose families depend heavily on government. We needed a time-out
to assimilate them and see them move out of the tax-consuming sector
of the nation. Republicans acquiesced in the importation of a new
electorate that may provide the decisive votes to send the party to the
ash heap of history.
Second, Republicans, when enacting tax cuts, repeatedly dropped
millions of taxpayers off the rolls, creating a huge class that
contributes little to pay for the expanding cornucopia of benefits it
receives.
Third, the social revolution of the 1960s captured the culture and
converted much of the nation. According to a new Pew poll, the number of
Americans who profess a belief in no religion at all has tripled since the
1990s and is now one in five of our countrymen.
If your racial and ethnic voter base is aging, shrinking and dying,
your moral code is being rejected, and the tax-consuming class has been
allowed to grow to equal or to dwarf the taxpaying class, the Grand Old
Party has a problem. But then so, too,
does the country.
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