National Review Online
Tuesday, January 19, 2021
What is the point of a political party bent on renouncing
its own members?
A party exists for two purposes: to win elections, and to
govern as its members want. The two goals are sometimes in tension: Parties
should aspire to a big tent at election time, but not such a big tent that they
can never agree on how to govern. A party must be willing to govern in ways
that drive away some voters, or it
will never attract any voters. And on
rare occasions, it may need to renounce people who falsely claim to represent
it, if it wishes to promote a coherent message.
But it should not practice subtraction without the
prospect of addition.
The recent actions of the Republican Party of Arizona
make no sense from any of these perspectives. Arizona Republicans censured John
McCain in 2014 on the theory that he failed to govern as its members wanted.
Two years later, he defeated Kelli Ward (now the state party chairwoman) in a
primary anyway, and was reelected, rendering the censure worse than pointless.
When former senator Jeff Flake and McCain’s widow, Cindy, endorsed Joe Biden
for president, one could have argued for rebuking them before the election in
order to communicate to voters that the party opposed this stance. Instead, the
Maricopa County Republican Party waited until after Biden carried Arizona in the election before passing a
censure of Flake, with no apparent purpose in mind but revenge. A motion to add
a censure of Mrs. McCain failed because the county party misunderstood its
own rules.
Whatever their other faults, neither Flake nor John
McCain ever lost an election in Arizona. In 2020, Arizona voted Democrat in the
presidential election for only the second time since 1948 and is now
represented by two Democratic senators for the first time since 1953. Normally,
this would prompt some introspection about how the party can win back voters.
Instead, Ward and the state party are now focused not only on censuring Flake
and Mrs. McCain, but also the state’s sitting Republican governor, Doug Ducey.
The ostensible grievance is that Ducey’s response to
COVID amounts to assuming “dictatorial powers” under a “faux State of
Emergency.” The actual motivation appears to be an extension of Donald Trump’s
rage at Ducey for acknowledging the obvious fact that Joe Biden won Arizona.
A party looking for answers about winning statewide
elections might be interested in emulating Ducey, who was reelected by 14 points
in 2018 while the Democrats were winning a Senate race. A party interested in
governing as its members want might be interested in emulating Ducey for that
reason as well, given his solidly conservative record as governor. A party
testing the public mood on COVID might note that fringe groups on both the left
and the right tried to promote recall petitions against him during the
pandemic, and both failed to get enough signatures. What sort of message are
Arizona voters supposed to take from the state party denouncing its own
governor as a dictator? Surely, not one that will fill them with confidence
about electing Republicans to responsible office.
Perhaps it is the leaders of the state party, not the elected officials, who need to be replaced with people more interested in what Arizona voters want.
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