Off with their heads! Eric Cantor, the Tea Party guillotine, and the certainty of conservative sell-
Off with their heads! Eric Cantor, the Tea Party guillotine, and the certainty of conservative sell-out
Cantor's just the latest: From Reagan to Rove, the GOP's driven ever-rightward by clash of idealism and betrayal
THOMAS FRANK
We got what we had coming, wrote Rep. Eric Cantor in his book Young Guns in 2010. He was referring to the drubbing his party took in the 2006 Congressional elections.
Back in 1994, he reminded readers, his fellow Republicans had taken control of Congress on a platform of high idealism. Once in power, however, too often they left these principles behind. The Republicans in that Congress, Cantor continued, became what they had campaigned against: arrogant and out of touch. There were important exceptions, but the GOP legislative agenda became primarily about Republican members themselves, not the greater cause.
These Republican backsliders abandoned their free-market ideology for an orgy of earmark spending, Cantor charged, and as a result they were rightfully punished at the polls. The fact is, the high-minded young gun declared, we had our chance, and we blew it.
Given what happened to Cantor himself last week shot down in a Republican primary by an even younger gun promising an even more zealous dedication to free-market ideals these passages seem highly ironic and more than a little bit prophetic.
In truth, however, both Cantors attitude circa 2010 and his sudden downfall last week were part of a long-running and basically unchanging Republican melodrama. The clash of idealism and sellout are how conservatives always perceive their movement, and what happened to Eric Cantor is a slightly more spectacular version of what often happens to GOP brass. That right-wing leaders are seduced by Washington D.C., and that they will inevitably betray the market-minded rank-and-file, are fixed ideas in the Republican mind, certainties as definite as are its convictions that tax cuts will cure any economic problem and that liberals are soft on whoever the national enemy happens to be.
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http://www.salon.com/2014/06/15/off_with_their_heads_eric_cantor_the_tea_party_guillotine_and_the_certainty_of_conservative_sell_out/