The Republican Party Becomes the Whig Party

· Thursday, February 2, 2012

In 1831, Henry Clay formed a new political party. He called it the Whig Party. His goal was to ensure Jeffersonian democracy and fight President Andrew Jackson, a Democrat. Over the course of the next 20 years, the Whig Party achieved several presidential victories. But as slavery assumed more and more national importance in the political debate, the Whig Party began to shatter.

Southern Whigs were slave owners; Northern Whigs were industrial gurus who hated slavery. In 1849, the Illinois Whig leader, one Abraham Lincoln, quit politics completely in frustration with the party's inability to come together. With the Compromise of 1850, in which Whig leaders strengthened the Fugitive Slave Act on the one hand and admitted California as a free state on the other, the Whig Party was fractured beyond repair.

In 1852, the anti-slavery faction of the Whig Party prevented the nomination of the incumbent, controversial president, Millard Fillmore; the party settled on a compromise choice, the bland, boring and elderly Gen. Winfield Scott. He lost in dramatic fashion to the handsome, young cipher Franklin Pierce. In 1854, with the passage of the Kansas-Nebraska Act, the Whigs were irrevocably split. Northern Whigs joined the Republican Party. Southern Whigs vanished.

By 1860, Abraham Lincoln was president of the United States -- as a Republican.

Why tell this story? Because the party of Lincoln seems about to splinter the same way its predecessor did.

The center of the Republican Party cannot hold. With Mitt Romney's victory in the Florida primary, it's clear that large swaths of the Republican establishment have rejected the Tea Party; it's similarly clear that the Tea Party has largely rejected Romney and his backers. While Republicans hope that the party will unite behind Romney in opposition to President Obama, that hope seems strained. Democrats, optimists think, fought a brutal Hillary vs. Obama battle in 2008, then united to defeat Republicans. They forget, however, that the Hillary vs. Obama battle was not so much a battle over message as a battle over messenger. More than anything, it was a fight over whether to push for the first black president or the first female president. When it came to ideology, however, Obama and Hillary were virtually identical.

The same is not true within the Republican Party. On what basis will the party unite? On fiscal responsibility? Romney and his cohorts have said nothing about serious entitlement reform; the Tea Party, meanwhile, calls for it daily. On taxation? Romney has a 59-point plan that smacks of class warfare; the Tea Party wants broad tax cuts across the board. On health care? Romney and much of the establishment aren't against the individual mandate in principle; the Tea Party despises the individual mandate as a violation of Constitutionally-guaranteed liberties. On foreign policy? Paleoconservatives want a Ron Paul-like isolationism; neoconservatives want a George W. Bush-like interventionism; realists want something in between.

There is the very real potential for the Republican Party to spin apart in the near future. It could easily become a set of regional parties knit together by opposition to extreme liberalism. Chris Christie and his followers don't have all that much in common with Rick Perry and his followers. Never has that chasm been so obvious.

The Republican Party is like a bed of nails. It works so long as the nails are relatively close together -- but as the nails are moved further apart, the chances of winding up spiked from head to toe grow. Right now, the nails are too far apart. The Republican Party is about to be cut to shreds, even as the establishment declares victory over those redneck insurgents from the Tea Party. Romney's victory may very well end up being pyrrhic for the GOP in the end.

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Comments

Bruce R Pierce

I hope your correct on this, with the Republican Party not promoting an actual alternative to the opposition it should be doomed.

Posted February 2, 2012 at 8:07:31 AM


TruthInAction

Well said. An analysis that isn't embittered, just cold stark truth.

Posted February 2, 2012 at 9:26:50 AM


mmccrindle

It's not only the Republican party that is doomed but our nation as well if your scenario comes to fruition.

Posted February 2, 2012 at 9:27:28 AM


Howard Last

Well said. I have attempted to vote Whig several time, but can not find them on the ballot. I thought I heard a republican big shot (you can't call them leaders) saying Barry is a communist, but I was mistaken.

Posted February 2, 2012 at 10:50:58 AM


Old Patriot

Great analysis Ben. I too think the Rockefeller segment of the Republican party will have the nominee, but will once again(Dole, McCain)lose the election. Truthfully, there is no real difference between them and the Democrats anyway. Our nation is doomed. The majority of Americans now think like Obama. They do not understand and do not care about our heritage, our founding priciples or rule of law. Socialism has won, our youth from the 60's till now have bought into the lies they have been taught. Here is the bad part...there are still enough patriots left that we will not go down without a fight. When anarchy ensues and chaos reigns, the blood of tyrants and patriots will be shed as Thomas Jefferson said so many years ago.

Posted February 2, 2012 at 1:05:55 PM


Steve

The two major parties have a strangle-hold on the electoral process in most states effectively shutting out third parties from most ballots. THAT needs to end.

I've always thought that the (GOP) BIG TENT idea prevented any real policy reform. If the GOP has to splinter, so be it. Most establishment Republicans have always put party and power above principles, so they deserve their fate.

Without some REAL spending reform and restoration of the Constitution and Rule of Law, it's all moot anyway.

In the anarchy that will follow national bankruptcy, the D and R labels won't mean much.

Posted February 2, 2012 at 4:35:33 PM


PDK

Excellent post Ben, and I wish to add that back in 08 I was making the same point, that there is no philosophical difference between Hillary and Barac, just whether America would have its first black man, or white woman, President. BTW, back in 68, during an 8th grade history class I started daydreaming about this very phenomenon, I`ve never forgotten it. I concluded, when the time finally came for a non white male president, that a black man would be chosen first and a white woman would have her time second. I did not think the two would run against each other at the same time. Niether did I think that the white woman would have "earned" her merits by being the wife of a one party popular white male President. But so it all was.

Of the many times I have advocated for preservation of the American culture over preservation of the American Union, I sometimes point out the fact that there will be still so much to argue about as conservatives have a range of philosophies. This is your very point with the republicans today.

If only liberals were not allowed to vote or run for public office American founding fathers culture would be protcted and preserved and all would be well. But such is not the case.

Because Americans prefer to preserve the Union over prefering to preserve the culture, because further the liberal/democrats wish to destroy Americas founding fathers culture, those who are not liberal/democrat must bond together as painful as that may be, just to keep the liberal/democrats from destroying America.

This is all such a terrible waste of energy when it is compared to a dissolved Union with two resultant countries, but such is our reality.

One and done, nobama 2012, vote republican. Thank you.

Posted February 2, 2012 at 5:13:21 PM


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