By John Young.
This just in: John McCain – too liberal for the Republican Party.
Guilty, as pronounced by Arizona Republican Party committee members who voted to censure the state’s senior senator. Is anyone surprised?
McCain’s crimes: insufficiently pure thought, and collaboration with the enemy. McCain’s chief offenses, said a state party spokesman, were backing immigration reform and “supporting funding” for the Affordable Care Act.
Supporting the ACA? No. McCain opposed it. What he said in 2013 was that tea party extremists who sought to shut down the government should cool it.
Voters had returned President Obama to office, McCain observed, like it or not, and the ACA had been law for four years.
Let me be the first to predict that this matter – the state party’s denunciation of McCain – will weigh on voters like dust impedes wind: not at all.
The tea party’s crowning achievement thus far has been to shut down the government, for the second time in two decades, a gambit that succeeded mainly to remind voters how much they like government.
Granted: In their impervious, locked-down, gerrymandered districts, some in Congress need not worry about how their tactics are received by American voters. You’d think their party would, however.
Speaking of being weighed down: In The New Yorker, Frank Rich extends his sympathy to today’s Republican Party over the fact that certain voices have become its own, and they aren’t the types that win national elections.
The first is Fox News. Fox’s ratings are robust within the niche it cultivates with its highly calculated appeals to white conservatives, but it’s anathema to a broader, diverse constituency. It’s something that concerns Fox News not one whit. But it should the GOP.
Hearing a political message that TV and AM radio listeners desire makes these listeners feel better, but Rich points out that the central premise pumped out by right-wing broadcasters is a myth.
Rather than being victimized by “lamestream” media, Republicans, when in power nationally, were enabled and bolstered by the media establishment.
Those media, Rich writes, were “the GOP’s best friend for several generations. ABC, CBS and NBC nightly news worked for GOP presidential candidates – convincing voters to see elections through a wide prism.”
Rich continues: “Conservatives delighting at the influence of their favorite talk show hosts and the decline of the mainstream media have missed this crucial modern political lesson: The GOP fared best in presidential politics through a nationalizing lens – not narrow-based ideological appeals.”
Explain to me the viability of an organization that offers itself as a national player but is too narrow to countenance the likes of a John McCain.
Longtime Texas newspaperman John Young lives in Colorado.








