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Grand New Party: How Republicans Can Win the Working Class and Save the American Dream

par Ross Douthat, Reihan Salam (Auteur)

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In a provocative challenge to Republican conventional wisdom, two of the Right's rising young thinkers call upon the GOP to focus on the interests and needs of working-class voters.
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5 sur 5
I skimmed the history section and went straight to the policy selection. The brief treatment prevents any detailed discussion of the real challenges of the proposals, so one needs to take it for what it is -- a provocative menu of options and an outlining of areas of emphasis. From the vantage point of 2017, however, one really wishes some of this advice had been followed.

An aside: this is the first time I had read of the wage subsidy concept as an alternative to an expanded EITC or increased minimum wage. That requires a bit more study. ( )
  ben_a | Sep 17, 2017 |
This book from 2008 tries to lay out a path forward for the Republican party that would allow them to win over the "Sams Club" Americans in the working class. It begins with a summary of initiatives since the New Deal concluding with several compliments for the policies of the George W Bush. It then concludes with policy proposals in a number of areas.

Reading this book eight years after it was published is revealing since virtually none of these proposals was adopted by the GOP. Instead, they turned themselves into the "Party of No" doing nothing to help any of their constituents outside of the 1%. The book is still worth reading, especially for Democrats since it includes some good starting points for policies in several areas. It can also serve as a call to action for Democrats to do more for Sams Club voters. ( )
  M_Clark | Aug 18, 2016 |

The first half of the book is a history of American politics (including various critiques of previously written histories) from the New Deal to the Republican defeats in '06. They criticize conservatives who believe in a Reagan myth by showing he was no Goldwater small-government conservative, he believed in a powerful goverment that was helpful and not harmful. They explain why the middle class,"Sam's Club voters", keep swinging back and forth between parties in their voting patterns.

The authors identify some major demographic and economic problems that threaten the American way of life, including the growing divide between the upper class and the working class. They then propose a list of (mostly economist-produced) legislative solutions to win the Sam's Club voters and renew the Republican Party. Among them:

1. Expanded child tax credits and other subsidies for parents.
2. Embracing suburban expansion rather than urban renewal. Ideas include funding new interstate construction and implementing congestion pricing and such.
3. They propose Brad Delong's health care plan of requiring all workers to put 15% of income into an HSA, and allowing the gov't to pick up the tab once that money has been spent as a way to reduce health care costs.
4. Replacing the current income tax system with a consumption tax instead (Huckabee's Fair Tax).
5. Scrapping farm subsidies and replacing them with green technology subsidies or other subsidies to encourage business development in the farm states.
6. Providing college tuition credits to every high school graduate.
7. Replace wasteful subsidies with federal money to local gov'ts for the expansion of police forces. (This would create jobs for low-educated people as well as teach them discipline and curb the crime that is likely to appear...this makes sense as part of a stimulus package during a recession, IMO).
8. Smarter immigration reform by...well, this part wasn't quite clear.

Douthat and Reihan have undoubtedly discussed some of their ideas with economists like Tyler Cowen, but they really gloss over some of the weaknesses of their arguments. Some of their ideas make great sense but require more political will than currently found. What the book really lacks is a works cited, they give a whole bunch of facts, quotes, and figures with no citations.

I found much of the history to be informative, but seeing how the GOP has devolved since this book was written is rather depressing. I was hoping this book would inspire me and renew my faith in the GOP. It has given me some ideas but seems to do little to address the current pressing problems. If the GOP makes gains in Congress in 2010 then I'll be interested to see how many have read this work, if not the party is probably doomed. David Brooks also said:

"It may take a few defeats for the G.O.P. to embrace a Sam’s Club agenda, but sooner or later, it will happen. Trust me. "



My favorite quote from the book (on the ever-increasing divide between the upper-class and the working-class):

"As the educated class became dismissive of religious faith, the religous traditions they had abandoned turned increasingly anti-intellectual, with Tim LaHaye and Jerry Falwell suceeding Reinhold Niebuhr and Thomas Merton; this, in turn, made America's meritocrats more contemptuous still toward organized religion. As highly educated consumers abandoned Newsweek and the networks in favor of the more highbrow pleasures afforded by cable television and NPR and HBO, the mass-market magazines and the networks turned to bread and circuses--game shows and blockbuster movie coners, reality TV and self-help columns--to keep their audiences hooked, which only encouraged further defections by their highbrow readers and further cultural polarization. The more that elites kept patriotism at arm's length and treated national pride with a sophisticate's tolerance, the more the breach was filled by Sean Hannity-styled jingoists. The mor the mass upper class seemed to look down on the rubes in "Red America," the more the rubes returned the favor, embracing a self-conscious anti-intellectualism that ran from George Wallace to Ross Perot and reached its apotheosis, perhaps, in the era of George W. Bush."



In all, I give it 3.5 stars out of 5. ( )
  justindtapp | Jun 3, 2015 |
Written before developments since 2008, but still relevant and compelling. ( )
  Eagleduck86 | Aug 21, 2011 |
The United States has a lot of problems. On occasion, someone might have a bright idea on how to solve those problems. This book, asserting it can fix all America’s problems, the GOP needs to offer an agenda that would help a pan-ethnic working class.

Unfortunately, it seems that the people most in need of reading this book have not done so. Arizona attempted to solve its immigration problem in the most nativist way possible, alienating the emergent Latin American cohort. Republicans in Congress are defending the ecocidal terrorism and corporate incompetence of British Petroleum, meanwhile blaming regulation as the culprit. (As if the United States political system has had no relationship with Big Oil.) Meanwhile the Family Values ethos wanes amidst the sexual hypocrisy of George Rekers, Ted Haggard, Mark Foley and Michael Steele. Clearly, the GOP is in need of some serious ideological triage. Then again, when the car’s totaled, you aren’t going to waste your time debating trim color.

http://www.joebobbriggs.com/index.php?/en/grand-new-party.html ( )
  kswolff | Jul 6, 2010 |
5 sur 5
[T]he late charge of Hillary Clinton’s doomed presidential campaign made white working-class voters surprisingly fashionable.

They’ll stay that way if the important new book Grand New Party, by two young writers for The Atlantic, Ross Douthat and Reihan Salam, has the impact on the political debate that it should. In an incisive analysis of the past 30 years of our politics, Douthat and Salam puncture self-comforting delusions of both the Right and the Left, and persuasively advocate a reorientation of the GOP to address working-class concerns. . . .

Douthat and Salam’s worst case is a “steady degradation of everyday working-class life under the pressures of rising illegitimacy, insecurity, and stratification.”

Douthat and Salam want Republicans to work to forestall this future, and to speak persuasively to working-class voters. A first step is acknowledging “the persistent unpopularity of the GOP’s small-government message among the Sam’s Club constituency.” Douthat and Salam float an activist program geared to buttressing families and addressing working-class discontents: a $5,000-per-child tax credit; subsidies for parents providing their own child care; expanded transportation infrastructure to ease the suburban commute; etc.

The details are less important than the trajectory. Their proposals have been dismissed as “Clintonian triangulation from the right.” But back in 1992, Bill Clinton’s political achievement was considerable. He broke with the stale pieties of his own party, and — with new emphases and a few well-aimed policies — renovated its image.
 

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In a provocative challenge to Republican conventional wisdom, two of the Right's rising young thinkers call upon the GOP to focus on the interests and needs of working-class voters.

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