Voters Reject ‘America-Last’ Policies of GOP

• Whether the GOP likes it or not, Trump may have saved the Republican Party.

By Patrick J. Buchanan —

Neither George W. Bush, the Republican Party nominee in 2000 and 2004, nor Jeb, the dethroned prince of Wales, was in Cleveland. John McCain and Mitt Romney, the last two nominees, also were also no-shows.

These former leaders would like it thought that high principle keeps them away from a GOP convention that would nominate Donald Trump. Petulance, however, must surely play a part. Bush Republicans feel unappreciated, and understandably so.

For Trump’s nomination represents not only a rejection of their legacy but a repudiation of much of post-Cold War party dogma.

America crossed a historic divide and entered a new era. Even should Trump lose, there is likely no going back.

Trump has attacked the North American Free Trade Agreement, Most Favored Nation status for China, and the South Korea trade deal as badly negotiated. But the problem lies not just in the treaties but in the economic philosophy upon which they were based.

Free-trade globalism was a crucial component of the New World Order (NWO), whose creation George H.W. Bush called the new great goal of United States foreign policy at the United Nations in October 1991.

Bush II and Jeb are also free-trade zealots.

But when the American people discovered that the export of their factories and jobs to low-wage countries and sinking salaries were the going price of globalism, they rebelled, turned to Trump, and voted for him to put America first again.

Does anyone think that if Trump loses, we are going back to Davos-Dubai ideology, and Barack Obama’s Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) is our future? Even Hillary Clinton has gotten the message and dumped TPP.

Economic nationalism is the future.

The only remaining questions are how many trade deficits shall America endure and how many defeats shall the Republican Party suffer before it formally renounces the free-trade fanaticism that has held it in thrall.

The Bush idea of remaking America into a more ethnically, culturally, diverse nation through mass immigration, rooted in an egalitarian ideology, also appears to be yesterday’s enthusiasm.

With Republicans backing Trump’s call, after the terrorist attack in San Bernardino, for a moratorium on Muslim immigration, and the massacres in Paris, Nice, and the Pulse Club in Orlando, Florida, diversity seems to be less celebrated.

Here, the Europeans are ahead of us. Border posts are being re-established across the continent. Behind the British decision to quit the European Union (EU) was resistance to more immigration from the Islamic world and Eastern Europe.

Recently, French President Francois Hollande was booed at memorial services in Nice for the hundreds massacred and maimed by a madman whose family roots were in the old French colony of Tunisia.

Marine Le Pen of the National Front, who wants to halt immigration and quit the EU, is running far ahead of Hollande in the polls for next year’s elections.

As for the foreign policies associated with the Bushes, the NWO of Bush I and the crusade for global democracy of Bush II “to end tyranny in our world” are seen as utopian.

Most Republicans ask: How have all these interventions and wars improved our lives or our world? With 6,000 U.S. dead, 40,000 wounded, and trillions of dollars sunk, the Taliban is not defeated in Afghanistan. Al Qaeda and ISIS have outposts in a dozen countries. Iraq, Syria, Libya, and Yemen are bleeding and disintegrating. Turkey appears headed for an Islamist and dictatorial future. The Middle East appears consumed in flames.



 

Yet, despite Trump’s renunciation of Bush war policies and broad support to talk to Russia’s Vladimir Putin, the neocons, who engineered many of the disasters in the Middle East, and their hawkish allies, seem to be getting their way for a new Cold War.

They are cheering the deployment of four battalions of North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) troops to the Baltic states and Poland, calling for bringing Sweden and Finland into NATO, pushing for sending weapons to Ukraine, and urging a buildup on the Black Sea as well as the Baltic Sea.

They want to scuttle the Iranian nuclear deal and have the U.S. Navy confront China to support the rival claims of Vietnam, the Philippines, Malaysia, Brunei, and Indonesia to rocks and reefs in the South China Sea, some of which are under water at high tide.

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Who represents the future of the GOP?

On trade and immigration, the returns are in. Should the GOP go back to globalism, amnesty, or open borders, it will sunder itself and have no future.

And if the party is perceived as offering America endless wars in the Middle East and constant confrontations with the great nuclear powers, Russia and China, over specks of land or islets having nothing to do with the vital interests of the U.S., then it will see its anti-interventionist wing sheared off.

At issue is the battle between the Party of Bush and Party of Trump: Will we make America safe again and great again? Or are globalism, amnesty, and endless interventions our future?

Do we put the world first, or America first?

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Patrick J. Buchanan is a writer, political commentator, presidential candidate and author.

4 Comments on Voters Reject ‘America-Last’ Policies of GOP

  1. Sitting in Canada allows me a birds eye view of US politics which is sometimes better than the in the weeds pov. IMHO the root of decline in the quality of governance and concomitant accountability lies in the lack of an effective opposition. The 2 party system is to blame. The MSM never gives credence to alternate parties, the system is rigged to allow only the 2 parties on TV debates drowning out the sane voices of reason that alternative parties may bring. And American voters are simply not thinking out of the box to vote for party #3 or #4 or #5. The lack of political alternatives in a country that prides itself on healthy competition is surprising to say the least.

  2. Joe Putnam has it right. The last time American voters had a choice in a Presidential election was 1932, long before most Americans alive today were born, including myself. (1940)
  3. Interesting analysis. I think the (supposedly conservative) Republican Party is done for. As a patriot, I am not a fan of the party of Lincoln—though I hasten to add that I oppose Democrats just as vigorously.

    This election will show which way America is leaning—open big government socialism and multiculturalism (Hillary), or big government corporatism wrapped in good sounding rhetoric (Trump). And if you are considering the “lesser of the two evils” voting theory, I would recommend you check out my recent (and final) blog post titled “The Lesser of the two Evils” on my WordPress blog Putnam Liberty Notes.

    I am afraid that America is fading away, and most patriots do not realize it, let alone most average Americans.

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