Press-Telegram (Long Beach)

GOP needs a more positive vision

- By Armstrong Williams

“The enemy within” is the phrase that House Speaker Nancy Pelosi used to describe the chaos brewing just beneath the surface of the Republican Party. She was referring to how the fencing at the Capitol complex may physically keep protesters out, but there are far more sinister views and schisms within, and she would do well to acknowledg­e this fact.

This lingering demon that haunts the party — fueled by rage, distrust and sometimes hatred — is not what the party should seek to preserve.

As the late conservati­ve philosophe­r Roger Scruton reminds us, conservati­ves must know what to keep and preserve and what to discard, and the bad elements that have corrupted the party must be reformed if the party is to sustain and survive. Sure, they will call it by some other name, but it feeds and foments at the darkest of levels. In some instances, it is pure evil.

Call it racism, nationalis­m or whatever you like, but it’s certainly not rooted in good government or leadership and has absolutely nothing to do with conservati­sm as it is contextual­ly defined.

To that end — and with all due respect — former President Donald Trump was not a leader.

Instead, he was a collector. He did not lead the tens of millions of voters who supported him as much as he collected their votes. He allowed them to view him as a man wearing many hats, and yes, even many masks. They saw in him what they wanted to see, and he was OK with that. He was one man with many faces, and each face represente­d something different for each of his followers and supporters.

I’ve written numerous columns about Trump’s heroism, his wins on policy and the economy’s unimaginab­le successes in these times. On that, he absolutely deserves recognitio­n and credit. Yet, moving forward, the Republican Party cannot be a party that appeals to the most negative emotions within the body politic. The Republican Party must be the party of hope and aspiration and the party that paves the road for America’s future as it has so many times in the past.

The Republican Party was the party that embraced the struggle for racial justice, and in its early years, it never shied away from the racial disparitie­s that exist in our country; in fact, it led the charge to improve them. The party focused on economic opportunit­y and prosperity; it understood the importance of a good education as one of the keys to upward mobility.

The Republican Party was America’s party because it always understood that most Americans are centrist and pragmatic in their approach. Shockingly, most Americans don’t want expansive government leading the way; most Americans want an opportunit­y to reach their dream and, within reason, want the tools, such as a reliable publicscho­ol education, at their disposal to make reaching their dreams commonplac­e.

The Bible teaches us that our Creator writes eternity in our hearts. That’s why we, more than any other nation, pursue and believe that America’s best days are ahead of us, not behind us. That’s why we strive with hope and aspiration­s and why thousands of people choose to immigrate to this country each year. In many ways, this is a new Manifest Destiny that renews itself year after year, decade after decade. Not because we have some warped sense of American exceptiona­lism. Our Heavenly Father simply grants it.

The Republican Party should seek to restore that aspect for all Americans. It’s what we yearn for — and what we cannot live without.

 ?? SUSAN WALSH — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell of Ky., walks on Capitol Hill in Washington on Feb. 23, 2021.
SUSAN WALSH — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell of Ky., walks on Capitol Hill in Washington on Feb. 23, 2021.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States