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Whither the GOP

Thoughts on a Working Class Agenda for the Republican Party

  • In-Person
  • New America
    740 15th St NW #900
    Washington, D.C. 20005
  • 7PM – 9PM EDT

On Thursday, July 17, the New America Foundation’s Next Social Contract Initiative hosted a panel discussion for Grand New Party: How Republican’s Can Win the Working Class and Save the American Dream by Ross Douthat, Senior Editor of The Atlantic and Reihan Salam, a Fellow at New America and Associate Editor of The Atlantic. On the panel, along with the authors, were Frank Micciche from New America; Ramesh Ponnuru, Senior Editor of the National Review; and Noam Scheiber, Senior Editor of The New Republic. Matthew Continetti, Associate Editor of The Weekly Standard, moderated the event. An MP3 audio recording can be downloaded below, while video will be available at right.

Salam opened the discussion with a terse and pointed introduction, which set the pace for the rest of the discussion. He questioned the salience of the traditional issues of the Republican Party. The Cold War is over, democracy is spreading without government intervention, and marginal tax rates are already at their lowest level in years. The Regan era was largely successful. Now there is a new, young cadre of conservative thinkers who subscribe to the traditional ideological cannon – according to Salam this is Thatcher, Regan, and Hayek – but who think that in the present moment, policy needs to be innovative and bold.

The only self-described liberal in the conversation, Scheiber largely agreed with the policies laid out in Grand New Party. However, he suggested the policy prescriptions would be more apt for the Democratic Party. While a 21st century “silent majority” might exist, he questioned whether the GOP could feasibly adjust to this new base. The GOP, he said, always favors the affluent when its interests conflict with the middle class, as would likely be the case for implementing the Grand New Party agenda. Under President Bush and the GOP Congress, he noted, dividend taxes were eliminated and capital gains rates cut, but an increase in the child tax credit was jettisoned to reduce the package’s overall cost. Scheiber says Democrats have already established institutional mechanisms for promoting working class interests.

Salam said that this book presented ideas for a long-term shift in the party on a 10-15 year horizon. Douthat aptly noted that, by definition, any reform goes against trends. People thought no Democrat could reformed welfare or signed NAFTA, but Clinton did. The Democratic base was with Clinton on these reforms, Ponnuru added, even if the party higher-ups showed resistance. Now Republicans are in the same situation; the elites have retreated to Regan minimalism, forgetting that Reagan was never an ideologue, and instead pragmatically applied radical ideas. Douthat emphasized that his book hoped to change Republican focus, but not ideology. Conservatives have failed to focus on socioeconomic trends, he added, but their principles were still sound.

Salam said that the party needs to find themes that resonate more directly with voters. McCain’s focus on campaign finance reform and cap and trade does not stir people’s hearts. Family values, the panelists agreed, should be the backbone of Republican policy. Douthat claimed that the Republican base has always been open to the idea that there is good spending and bad spending, and spending on family values could have long term payoffs. Ponnuru agreed that Republicans are open to spending that will save in the end, noting that social conservatism is a rational response to economic stress. Douthat said that people want guns when they feel crime threatens their security, are prolife because their ethical values are threatened, and that while gay marriage has primarily a symbolic impact, again people are against it because they feel family values are threatened. Salam agreed that gay marriage is really about values surrounding child rearing. This new policy angle could bridge the gap between Republican economic and social philosophy, which have at times seemed ideologically disparate.

-Tyler Ibbotson-Sindelar, Research Intern for the Next Social Contract Initiative

Location

Darlington House Library (formerly The Childe Harold)
1610 20th St, NW 3rd Floor

Washington, DC, 20009

See map: Google Maps

Participants
Featured Speakers

  • Reihan Salam
    Associate Editor, The Atlantic
    Fellow, New America Foundation
    Co-Author, Grand New Party: How Republicans Can Win the Working Class and Save the American Dream
  • Ross Douthat
    Senior Editor, The Atlantic
    Co-Author, Grand New Party: How Republicans Can Win the Working Class and Save the American Dream
  • Michael Lind
    Senior Fellow, New America Foundation
    Author, Up From Conservatism: Why the Right is Wrong for America
  • Ramesh Ponnuru
    Senior Editor, National Review
    Author, The Party of Death: The Democrats, the Media, the Courts, and the Disregard for Human Life
  • Noam Scheiber
    Senior Editor
    The New Republic
  • Frank Micciche
    Deputy Director, Next Social Contract Initiative
    New America Foundation

Moderator

  • Matthew Continetti
    Associate Editor, The Weekly Standard
    Author, The K Street Gang: The Rise and Fall of the Republican Machine

Programs/Projects/Initiatives