BOSTON (AP) — The Republican Party seems as divided and angry as ever.
Infighting has penetrated the
highest levels of the House GOP leadership. Long-standing geographic
tensions have increased, pitting endangered Northeastern Republicans
against their colleagues from other parts of the country. Enraged tea
party leaders are threatening to knock off dozens of Republicans who
supported a measure that raised taxes on the nation's highest earners.
"People are mad as hell. I'm
right there with them," Amy Kremer, chairman of the Tea Party Express,
said late last week, declaring that she has "no confidence" in the party
her members typically support. Her remarks came after GOP lawmakers
agreed to higher taxes but no broad spending cuts as part of a deal to
avert the "fiscal cliff."
"Anybody that voted 'yes' in the House should be concerned" about primary challenges in 2014, she said.
At the same time, one of the GOP's
most popular voices, New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, blasted his
party's "toxic internal politics" after House Republicans initially
declined to approve disaster relief for victims of Superstorm Sandy. He
said it was "disgusting to watch" their actions and he faulted the GOP's most powerful elected official, House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio.
The GOP's internal struggles to figure out what it wants to be were painfully exposed after Mitt Romney's loss to President Barack Obama
on Nov. 6, but they have exploded in recent days. The fallout could
extend well beyond the party's ability to win policy battles on Capitol
Hill. It could hamper Republicans as they examine how to regroup and
attract new voters after a disheartening election season.
To a greater degree than the Democrats, the Republican Party
has struggled with internal divisions for the past few years. But these
latest clashes have seemed especially public and vicious.
"It's disappointing to see
infighting in the party," said Ryan Williams, a Republican operative and
former Romney aide. "It doesn't make us look like we're in a position
to challenge the president and hold him accountable to the promises he
made."
What's largely causing the dissension? A lack of a clear GOP leader with a single vision for the party.
Republicans haven't had a
consistent standard-bearer since President George W. Bush left office in
2008 with the nation on the edge of a financial collapse. His
departure, along with widespread economic concerns, gave rise to a tea
party movement that infused the GOP's
conservative base with energy. The tea party is credited with broad
Republican gains in the 2010 congressional elections, but it's also
blamed for the rising tension between the pragmatic and ideological
wings of the party — discord that festers still.
It was much the same for
Democrats in the late 1980s before Bill Clinton emerged to win the White
House and shift his party to the political center.
2012 presidential nominee Romney
never fully captured the hearts of his party's most passionate voters.
But his tenure atop the party was short-lived; since Election Day, he's
disappeared from the political world.
Those Republican leaders who
remain engaged — Christie, Boehner, Senate Minority Leader Mitch
McConnell of Kentucky and Republican National Committee Chairman Reince
Priebus — are showing little sign of coming together.
Those on the GOP's
deep bench of potential 2016 presidential contenders, including Florida
Sen. Marco Rubio, Wisconsin Rep. Paul Ryan, and Louisiana Gov. Bobby
Jindal, have begun staking out their own, sometimes conflicting ideas
for the party.
Over the short term at least, the party's divisions probably will continue to be exposed.
Obama has outlined a second-term
agenda focused on immigration and gun control; those are issues that
would test Republican solidarity even in good times. Deep splits already
exist between Republican pragmatists and the conservative base, who
oppose any restrictions on guns or allowances for illegal immigrants.
It's unclear whether Obama can exploit the GOP
fissures or whether the Republican dysfunction will hamper him. With
Boehner unable to control his fractured caucus, the White House is left
wondering how to deal with the House on any divisive issue.
Fiscal issues aren't going away,
with lawmakers were agree on a broad deficit-reduction package. The
federal government reached its borrowing limit last week, so Congress
has about two months or three months to raise the debt ceiling or risk a
default on federal debt. Massive defense and domestic spending cuts are
set to take effect in late February. By late March, the current
spending plan will end, raising the possibility of a government
shutdown.
Frustrated conservative activists
and GOP insiders hope that the continued focus on fiscal matters will
help unite the factions as the party pushes for deep spending cuts. That
fight also may highlight Democratic divisions because the party's
liberal wing vehemently opposes any changes to Social Security or
Medicare
"Whenever you lose the White House, the party's going to have ups and
downs," said Republican strategist Ron Kaufman. "My guess is when the
spending issues come up again, the Democrats' warts will start to show
as well."
The GOP's fissures go beyond positions on issues. They also are geographical.
Once a strong voice in the party,
moderate Republicans across the Northeast are nearly extinct. Many of
those who remain were frustrated in recent days when Boehner temporarily
blocked a vote on a disaster relief bill.
Rep. Peter King, R-N.Y., said campaign donors in the Northeast who give the GOP after the slight "should have their head examined."
Boehner, who just won a second
term as speaker, quickly scheduled a vote on a narrower measure for
Friday after the new Congress convened, and it rushed out a $9.7 billion
measure to help pay flood insurance claims.
Weary Republican strategists are trying to be hopeful about the GOP's
path ahead, and liken the current situation to party's struggles after
Obama's 2008 election. At the time, some pundits questioned the
viability of the Republican Party. But it came roaring back two years later, thanks largely to the tea party.
"If we have learned anything from
the fiscal cliff fiasco, conservatives discovered we need to stand
firm, and stand together, on our principles from beginning to end," said
Republican strategist Alice Stewart. "It's frustrating to see the GOP
drop the ball and turn a position of true compromise into total
surrender. The Democrats succeeded in their strategy of divide and
conquer."
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