The Establishment Is Dead

By Ben Shapiro ben-shapiroIn Mondays Iowa caucus Senator Ted Cruz R-Texas the man most hated by the Republican establishment came from behind to nab front-runner Donald Trump. Senator Marco Rubio R-Fla. the supposed establishment favorite came in just a point behind Trump. According to conventional wisdom this should set up a battle royal among anti-establishment Cruz anti-establishment Trump and establishment Rubio. If Rubio emerges victorious the pundits explain the establishment will have lived to fight another day and put those rowdy conservative grass-roots anti-establishment types in their place. This is nonsense. Cruz is the most conservative person in the Republican race. Trump up until he became the establishments baton against Cruz was a thorn in the side of the establishment. And the new establishment darling Rubio is arguably the second-most conservative person in the Republican race (the only other contender is Senator Rand Paul). Theres a reason the establishment backed then-Republican Florida Governor Charlie Crist over Rubio in 2010. In fact theres only one reason the establishment can tolerate Rubio who is ardently anti-abortion thoroughly hawkish and consistently pro-free markets (outside of his bizarre support for sugar subsidies). They support Rubio because he backed the Gang of Eight amnesty bill in 2013. Rubio has been soft on immigration since his days in the Florida state legislature. He briefly adopted Mitt Romneys self-deportation platform in 2012 before flipping left in 2013; then after serious blowback he abandoned that position. Thats obviously problematic and a reason for conservatives to question his credentials on that issue. But leaving amnesty aside calling Rubio establishment does a true disservice to the conservative grassroots who elected him in the first place. So what does that mean? It means that in the Iowa caucus openly anti-establishment candidates -- from Trump to Cruz to Rubio to Ben Carson to Rand Paul -- received 88.9 percent of the vote. Jeb Bush the original establishment favorite received just 2.8 percent of the vote. John Kasich clocked in at 1.9 percent. Chris Christie received just 1.8 percent. The story is no different in New Hampshire. There establishment candidates amount to just 27.6 percent of the electorate according to the latest RealClearPolitics polling averages. All the talk of the tea partys death was greatly exaggerated -- the tea party took over the Republican Party. The establishments newfound enthusiasm for Rubio represents a desperation play an attempt to latch onto the least worst option they can find. But that doesnt mean that Rubio is establishment. So conservatives should cheer the results of the Iowa caucus regardless of which candidate they supported. That doesnt mean the establishment cant rise from the grave - they co-opted tea partyer Rubio once and may be able to do so again. But it does mean that for the moment default successful national Republicanism is conservative. And thats a big win for the grassroots. Ben Shapiro is an attorney a writer and a Shillman Journalism Fellow at the Freedom Center. He is editor-at-large of Breitbart and author of the best-selling book Primetime Propaganda: The True Hollywood Story of How the Left Took Over Your TV.
by is licensed under
ad-image
image
11.20.2024

TEXAS INSIDER ON YOUTUBE

ad-image
image
11.20.2024
image
11.19.2024
ad-image