Politico Magazine (Opinion)
By Christine Todd Whitman
December 16, 2015
Every
few generations a political party has to define itself. Now is that
moment for the Republican Party. Until recently the GOP has been seen in
Washington as the “party
of no.” Now it is being defined as the party of extreme. While the U.S.
may be yearning for definitive leadership from a president, the use of
hate and fear tactics by so many of the GOP presidential candidates is
not the answer.
It
is no longer a stretch to compare Donald Trump, and some of the other
current Republican candidates for president, to some of the worst
dictators in history. Trump
especially is employing the kind of hateful rhetoric and exploiting the
insecurities of this nation, in much the same way that allowed Hitler
and Mussolini to rise to power in the lead-up to World War II. The
parallels are chilling. In pre-WWII Germany, the
economy was in ruins, people were scared, and they wanted someone to
blame. Today we find ourselves with a nation of people who feel under
attack both physically and economically and are fearful. The middle
class has never fully recovered economically from
the Great Recession. Income disparity is growing, but demonizing with a
broad-brush all “immigrants,” forgetting that nearly all of our
ancestors were exactly that at one point in the past 400 years, is both
dangerous and contrary to all this nation stands
for. After Paris and San Bernardino, attacking Muslims, the vast
majority of whom are peaceful adherents to their faith, has become
fashionable.
Language
shapes behavior. Hateful language gives susceptible people permission
to act on their fears. Preying on the marginalized who are scared of the
future is the time-honored
tactic of bullies and dictators. When times are difficult, people
always look for someone to blame: It is easy to pick out a target. Today
it is Muslims, but tomorrow it could be anyone. Hatred knows no bounds.
As a Republican, I am particularly concerned
by the rise of hate rhetoric within our party. We cannot ignore it, and
we can no longer dismiss it as a passing fluke. The damage it is
inflicting and the behavior it is inciting can last for years to come.
This
is not to say that our federal government doesn’t need to do more to
ensure that our intelligence agencies share information and that our
immigration policies are
updated to face new threats. But this is the job of government and not
vigilantes.
Let
me be very clear: This is not the Republican Party, but this is how we
are being defined right now. Ours is the party that fought to end
slavery and desegregate the
White House and public schools. Our 150-year history of fighting for
justice and economic opportunity for all Americans hangs in the balance.
We not only risk compromising the future of the Republican Party, but
our proud history as well. We need a candidate
who will take the lead in moving the Republican Party back toward its
traditional, philosophical roots of respect for and belief in the
individual, fiscal responsibility, pragmatic and realistic foreign
policy, and real environmental stewardship. We must once
again be the party of ideas that help hard-working families realize the
American dream.
All
that is in peril by candidates appealing to the worst, rather than the
best, of human nature. It is tempting, as Neville Chamberlain did in the
face of Hitler’s rise,
for polite people to respond to bombastic fascists by quietly ignoring
them and hoping they will go away like reasonable people. But people
like Donald Trump are neither polite nor reasonable. At times like this,
good people must rise up, call out evil for
what it is and stand against it.
We
must heed the wise admonition most commonly attributed to Edmund Burke:
“All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do
nothing.” Now is the time
for good men and women, particularly in the Republican Party, to get
engaged in the presidential primary process. As I have been saying for a
decade now, for too long, sensible members of both parties have ceded
the candidate selection process to the fringes
of their parties. This year, Republicans cannot sit idly by while the
very foundational values on which our party and our nation were built
are threatened.
As
conservatives, we do not believe in silencing ideas that are viewed as
offensive. This is not about muzzling one man, but rather about
defeating the ideas he espouses.
To those who are following him, we must give hope for their own lives
and a greater vision for American than the xenophobic slurry with which
Trump has stained our party and our national discourse.
Republicans,
now is the time to defeat this scourge of our party. We can make
America great again by defeating the selfishness, arrogance and bigotry
of Donald Trump.
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