"Tyranny is always better organised than freedom".–Charles Peguy
They are bought and paid for. How else to explain why they are risking their political careers in standing by a disgraced, failed president ? I don’t mean bought and paid for in the sense of outright bribes, but more in the promise of their being "taken care of" by the movement’s moneyed machine. Digby explains:
If one assumes that we are dealing with a party and a political movement that operates as the constitution expected politicians to operate, this [loyalty to a broadly reviled president] would all be very odd. But they aren’t. The modern Republican party has somehow managed to create movement loyalty that supersedes not only the national interest but their own political self-interest.
And that’s probably where money comes in. In a system where people are aware that historical narratives are being written to spec and where they are rarely held accountable for past political misdeeds, there is little downside to putting party before country or even before your own public career. There is no such thing as disgrace, and if you lose an election, when you leave office you immediately become a well paid director or executive of various firms you used to regulate, a television commentator or "motivational speaker" and just wait a bit before becoming a high priced lobbyist. There are not only second acts in conservative politics, there are third and fourth acts, well paid and guaranteed.
This is true to some extent in the Democratic Party as well, but the conservative movement is a much more organic, full service organization that offers cradle to grave welfare for loyal soldiers at all levels (and a lonely wilderness for apostates.) They don’t fear losing. As individuals, they stand to benefit handsomely from their association with the Business Party and no matter what happens they remain comfortably ensconced in the vast array of conservative organizations and affiliations that have been created over the past 30 years.
The conservative movement is built to last — even when it suffers electorally, the individuals within it pay no price, and the movement itself is reinforced. They believe, with good reason, that they have a solid minority at least that will always vote for them and whose regional and political prejudices they will always represent well. They know they will win the presidency as often as not. They are very good at political campaigning and manipulating the media.
If you are not co-optable, the movement will reject you. It’s classic machine politics. I suspect Huckabee is being "Gored" by the media and movement mouthpieces like Limbaugh because the machine perceives him as a loose cannon. Many of his views overlap with the basic movement ideology (e.g., support for the war, attitudes toward gays, etc.), so it’s obvious why Liberals can’t stand him, but he’s getting so much negative treatment from "his own" because he’s a true believer from the religious wing of the party, and as true believer less easy to manipulate. He’s the GOP version of Jimmy Carter, and as such the Beltway establishment’s worst nightmare. Ron Paul, the other GOP loose cannon and true believer from the Libertarian wing of the party, would be getting blasted the same way if he was the threat to machine control that Huckabee appears to be right now.
Thompson would have been the perfect machine candidate, but his vacuousness and cynicism was simply too magnificent for even the most skilled machine propagandists to paper over. The second choice would have been Giuliani, but his self-destruction has forced it to settle for Romney. He’s a loser, but better to lose an election than to lose control.
Relating this to my post yesterday about Obama’s conciliatory approach, there is no reconciliation or reasoning with the machine–there is only resisting it. The machine and its minions in the White House and congress have proven that they don’t have to give an inch so long as they stay united. Sure, they’re in a defensive posture for now, but they haven’t given up any of the ground they’ve won. They have been very effective in using guerrilla tactics to harass and confuse the Dems, and it’s only a matter of time until they regroup and go on the offensive again. Digby is quite right to say that the movement’s machine is built to last, and the only thing that can defeat it in the long run is broad public repudiation of its agenda.
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