Tyler Bilbo, Staff Writer
Ideology: Liberal, Writing From: Tulsa, OK

The Republican Party is in disarray. The effort to renew the GOP’s viability, however, should not be framed as a simple struggle between moderates and conservatives. This dangerous frame implies that the party’s identity ultimately rests with a particular intra-party faction. This line of thinking is precisely what has driven the party into the dustbins of irrelevancy.

The GOP could learn a lot from my party’s return to power. Although we were undoubtedly assisted by George W. Bush’s disastrous second term, we did not reclaim control of the House and Senate by running reliable liberals. From Senator Kay Hagan in North Carolina to Representative Harry Mitchell in Arizona, our rapid return to power was made possible by moderates. Despite the prevalence of political moderates throughout both chambers of Congress, the party still maintains a progressive identity at the national level. This is precisely how the Republican Party should function in relationship to conservatism.

The aptly named “GOPosaur”


The GOP’s decline began in the 2006 midterms and their journey back to power will also begin at the Congressional level. To fulfill this chapter in the GOP’s restructuring, the party must make inroads in some of the country’s more Democratic-trending areas. Just like Democratic leaders pragmatically recruited moderate Democrats in conservative areas, Republicans cannot sacrifice their viability at the altar of ideological purity. While my party has its fair share of purists, purists within the Republican are far more organized. Groups like the Club for Growth, who specialize in purging moderate Republicans from representing ideologically compatible districts, do nothing but help Democrats.
While I concede that the Republican caucuses in the House and Senate need to recruit more moderate candidates, the GOP would be foolish to emulate this strategy at the Presidential level. Turnout matters and the party’s conservative base will not turnout for a moderate candidate that cannot excite the base. Ohio, a perennial swing state in American politics, swung to the Democrats in 2008 because the GOP base did not turnout like they did for a more conservative candidate in 2004. Even though Democratic turnout was relatively weak, Republicans could not capitalize on this opportunity because GOP turnout dropped nearly 300,000 voters. Ohio, however, is only a microcosm of what will happen if Republicans continue to nominate candidates like John McCain.

This strategy of opening a big tent at the Congressional level while maintaining a tradition of nominating all-around conservatives at the Presidential level would serve the GOP well. It’s exactly how my party has operated in relationship to our progressive values and after only two election cycles, we control both the Congress and the White House. If Republicans figure this out, then us Democrats can once again be afraid of the GOP.

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