GOP: A Party That Hates Women
Missouri Congressman Todd Akin, right, a Republican currently running for the US Senate, listens to House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan, R-Wis., before a news conference on Ryan's budget agenda, on Capitol Hill in Washington. (photo: J. Scott Applewhite/AP)
Missouri Congressman Todd Akin, right, a Republican currently running for the US Senate, listens to House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan, R-Wis., before a news conference on Ryan's budget agenda, on Capitol Hill in Washington. (photo: J. Scott Applewhite/AP)
GOP: A Party That Hates Women
25 August 12
Romney and Ryan envision an anti-woman economy and society, but women are increasingly key to winning elections.
issouri GOP senatorial candidate Todd Akin's absurd comment that women's bodies can prevent pregnancies in cases of "legitimate rape" is disgusting. It also points to a deeper problem within the GOP.
Plainly, this is a party that hates women. And given
the huge gender gap opening up in favor of President Obama over the
presumptive GOP candidate, Mitt Romney, this has important implications
for economic and social policy going forward. Because if they win, the
Democrats are less likely to embrace the draconian fiscal austerity
proposals now advocated by Romney's advisors, along with the party's
regressive social agenda.
The current Republican Party is a perverse coalition
of the top 1 percent and the socially conservative right. The latter are
not well off for the most part. The Koch brothers (and others of that
ilk) have managed to convince the have-not religious fundamentalists to
vote against their own economic interests and support their internal
colonialism through economically regressive policies which are
exacerbating the country's mounting economic inequality.
This is untenable over the long run. Skewing income
distributions by shoveling money to the top always ends in a big
political upheaval. The social conservatives are older and aging and
becoming less of the total electorate. Someday the GOP's infernal
combination will blow apart because the top 1 percent will be rejected
by the masses and the numbers of the social conservatives will dwindle
too much.
Why? Largely because of today's new generation of
women who, although they represent varying degrees of economic
progressivism to conservatism, is largely rejecting the social
conservatism of the Creationists and hardcore fundamentalists on the
right. President Obama continues to outpoll Mitt Romney by substantial
margins among women voters. I would guess that this will more than
offset the appeal Romney holds among angry white males, increasingly
alienated by a country that is becoming less white, more socially
diverse, a veritable rainbow coalition of different ethnicities rather
than a Caucasian-dominated nation. An older generation of women who saw
no other way than to be dependent and kept and sexually repressed is
dying out.
This will change the economic landscape. Why? Well,
take a look at the latest bit of "economic wisdom" from the Romney
campaign (I owe this observation to economist Bill Mitchell), which has
just put out an economic paper, The Romney Program for Economic Recovery, Growth, and Jobs,
written by Stanford's John B Taylor, Harvard's Greg Mankiew, Columbia's
Glenn Hubbard, and Kevin Hassett from the American Enterprise
Institute. These men make the following claims:
America took a wrong turn in economic policy in the
past three years. The United States underperformed the historical norm
shown in the administration's own forecasts, and its policies are to
blame …These short-term stimulus packages were ineffective, leaving the
nation with higher debt, which acts as a drag on long-term growth
because households and businesses understand that the administration
must raise taxes significantly to pay off that debt.
Romney's economic team also claims that "uncertainty
over policy" (i.e. the large deficits and the private fear of large tax
hikes) is preventing a sound recovery in private spending. This has been
a common theme among the conservatives since the governments decided to
deploy fiscal stimulus.
True, President Obama also retains an unhealthy
obsession with "long-term fiscal sustainability" and "entitlement
reform" (i.e. shredding the social safety net). But for the most part,
he has avoided the worst of the excesses of the fiscal austerity
fanatics in Europe and those of the Tea Party in the U.S. As a
consequence, the U.S. economy has continued to grow. True, it is below
trend, but it is still growing and generating some jobs, in marked
contrast to what is occurring on the other side of the pond.
Mainstream economic theory claims that that private
spending is weak because we are scared of the future tax implications of
the rising budget deficits. But the overwhelming evidence shows that if
you own a business, you're not going to invest while consumption is
weak. And households will not spend because people are scared of
becoming unemployed and are trying to reduce their bloated debt levels.
Above all else, businesses need sales to encourage them to hire workers.
A restaurant doesn't lay anyone off when it's full of paying customers,
no matter how much the owner might hate the government, the paper work,
and the health regulations; A department store doesn't lay off workers
when it's full of paying customers; and an engineering firm doesn't lay
anyone off when it has a backlog of orders.
And guess what? Women are not only more than half of
the electorate, but they are a huge part of the overall aggregate demand
for goods and services. Under the Republican agenda, women could well
revert to a kind of economic serfdom, whose labor expended can be
considered surplus to that required to maintain the survival of the man
and his family.
In fact, if Romney's plan were to be introduced now
or, worse yet, the automatic budget sequestration cuts proposed in the
Budget Control Act from last fall were actually implemented, (which
mandates across-the-board cuts to reduce the deficit by $1.2 trillion
over 10 years), then we'd likely experience a double-dip recession in
the U.S. next year. Support for this view has been expressed by no less
than the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) which argued in a report the
other day, that the U.S. economy would slide into recession in fiscal
2013 if Congress fails to act to maintain current tax rates and avert
deep cuts to federal spending.
Austerity advocates like Romney and Ryan are obsessed
with putting the squeeze on public spending, especially broad social
welfare and education. Their plans mean that workers get trapped in a
low-skill, low-pay circle of disadvantage. The increasingly casualized
labor market is reinforcing that pathology, particularly for women.
As strange as it sounds, the worst of these effects
may well be thankfully nullified by the GOP's ongoing war on women
voters - the probable difference-makers in the upcoming election. Nat
Silver of the FiveThirtyEight blog
is the ultimate wonk pollster, and the best guestimates now are that
President Obama today is only ahead by around 3 to 4 percent. I think it
is a little more. I think Obama will do better as Romney's tax issues
bring more revelations and the GOP war on women becomes center stage.
Given the desultory state of the economy today, if the president wins by
anywhere near the same margin as in 2008, the handwriting will truly be
on the wall for the party of social conservatives, angry older white
men and the 1 percenters themselves.
The changes that are occurring in the overall
population as the next generation - particularly women - takes over will
be death to the past Republican coalition. The GOP will eventually
realize that its anti-choice stance and all that goes with it is a huge
problem. The party will find that its viscerally anti-feminist rhetoric
and policies will be even more of a killer in the future. And a
byproduct of that will be that the corporate predators who comprise so
much of the top 1 percenters will also realize that they can no longer
govern with the support of social conservatives who vote against their
own interests.
I think this election will make everyone realize that the future of the U.S. has already begun.
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