Analysis-Out of power in Washington, Republicans pursue hard-right
agenda across the country
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[May 07, 2021]
By James Oliphant and Nathan Layne
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Shut out of power in
Washington, Republicans are using their dominance in state houses across
the country to oppose Democratic President Joe Biden’s agenda and
appease the diehard supporters of his Republican predecessor, Donald
Trump.
In Texas, Republican lawmakers are pushing for legislation that would
allow citizens to carry a handgun without a permit or any training.
In Florida, Oklahoma and Iowa, Republican legislators passed bills
granting immunity to drivers who hit protesters, part of a wave of
Republican-led legislation aimed at cracking down on public protests of
the kind that followed the police killing of George Floyd. Across the
country, a bevy of states have passed bills preventing transgender
athletes from playing high school sports.
And Florida's Republican Governor Ron DeSantis on Thursday signed a
sweeping new reform bill that limits mail-in voting and ballot drop
boxes, making the state the latest to restrict voting access in the
aftermath of Trump's false claims that he lost the November election due
to widespread fraud.
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These actions have made for a stark contrast with the first few months
of the Biden administration, which has pursued a sweeping liberal agenda
on civil rights, police reform, gun control and voting rights.
Although Democrats control the White House and both chambers of
Congress, Republicans dominate the nation’s statehouses. After a dismal
showing by Democrats on the state level in the 2020 elections,
Republicans now control the legislatures of 30 states and also hold the
governor’s office in 23 of those states.
Republicans are using that power to serve as “counterweight to the
Democratic trifecta” in Washington, said Dee Duncan, president of the
Republican State Leadership Committee, an arm of the party that supports
state legislative candidates.
But civil rights groups, Democrats and even some Republicans say the
party is doubling down on a host of hot-button social and cultural
issues to only appeal to the party's activist base.
“It’s a toxic combination of grievance politics and the traditional
culture wars,” said David Jolly, a former Republican congressman from
Florida who left the party over Trump.
So far this year, Republican state lawmakers have proposed or advanced
more than 250 bills regarded by activists as being restrictive of LGBTQ
rights, 361 bills with restrictive voting provisions, and passed 35
bills to relax gun regulations, according to advocacy groups tracking
the legislation.
Meanwhile, the 83 anti-protest bills introduced so far in 2021 is more
than double the number introduced in comparable periods of prior
legislative sessions, according to Elly Page, a senior legal adviser at
the International Center for Not-for-Profit Law.
The trend signifies that the Republican Party, after its surprising
performance on the state level in November's election despite Trump's
own loss, continues to believe that it must play to the former
president's base in order to win, says Jacob Rubashkin, a nonpartisan
elections analyst in Washington.
"They are going to run - not so much on Trump’s policies - but on his
issues, on his grievances,” he said.
The risk, he said, is that Trump’s voters end up staying home when he
isn't on the ballot next year, while Republican policies undermine the
party's push to woo back the suburban, women and independent voters it
has lost to the Democrats, both in Senate elections next year and in
2024.
Duncan contended that voters largely support election reform and
anti-protest laws, saying they serve election integrity and public
safety. The party also hopes to point to Republican-run states like
Texas and Florida, where the economies are swiftly recovering from the
pandemic and schools are open to draw a contrast with Democratic states.
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Florida Governor Ron Desantis speaks during a campaign rally by U.S.
President Donald Trump at Pensacola International Airport in
Pensacola, Florida, U.S., October 23, 2020. REUTERS/Tom Brenner/File
Photo/File Photo
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“We are proud to run on the things that we have
done,” he said.
'STOKE OUTRAGE'
Darrell West, director of governance studies at the non-partisan
Brookings Institution, said Republicans have no choice but to
exploit divisive cultural issues because they will not be able to
run on the U.S. economy, which is poised to grow dramatically in the
coming year with Biden in the White House.
“They want to stoke outrage,” West said. “The side that’s angriest
is most likely to show up in the midterms.”
Florida, with DeSantis at the helm, is leading the way in advancing
right-wing legislation.
Beyond the election measure, Florida passed bills in the last two
weeks prohibiting businesses from requiring proof of COVID-19
vaccination in the state and social media companies from silencing
conservatives on their platforms.
Florida’s new anti-riot law, which DeSantis called "the strongest
anti-rioting, pro-law enforcement measure in the country", creates
new offenses with which authorities can charge protesters, enhances
other penalties and immunizes drivers from liability if they drive
their car into a crowded street.
The office of DeSantis, a close ally of Trump and who has been
mentioned as a possible presidential candidate in 2024, did not
respond to a request for comment.
Ray Rodrigues, a Republican state senator from southwest Florida,
said the legislative agenda reflects the fact that “Florida is
becoming a more conservative state."
After edging Democrat Hillary Clinton in the state by just over one
percentage point in 2016, Trump won Florida by more than three
points last year. Former President Barack Obama, a Democrat, had
twice won the state.
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LURCH TO THE RIGHT
In Texas, the debate over "permitless carry", which would residents
to carry a handgun in public without a permit or training, is
illustrative of the lurch to the right among state Republicans.
On Wednesday, a divided Texas Senate approved the bill on a
party-line vote, returning it to the House for review. Governor Greg
Abbott has promised to sign it into law, even though most Texans and
major law enforcement associations oppose it. National opinion polls
consistently show a sizeable majority of Americans favor tighter gun
laws in the wake of mass shootings.
Abbott's office did not respond to a request for comment.
Elsewhere in the country, seven states this year have enacted
so-called Second Amendment Sanctuary laws prohibiting local
officials from enforcing any new federal gun control regulation,
bringing the total number of states with such legislation to 11,
said Erich Pratt, Senior Vice President at Gun Owners of America, a
gun advocacy group.
Jolly, the former Republican congressman, said the Republican
legislative strategy is less concerned with aligning with public
opinion and more focused on galvanizing an activist minority of
voters.
“They're doing it so they can have high-profile fights," he said.
"You always have to have an enemy."
(Reporting by James Oliphant and Nathan Layne, Editing by Soyoung
Kim and Alistair Bell)
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