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Alexander Moss (VA)'s avatar

Anthony Aguero is the type of "conservative" "Republican" that drove my 97-almost-98 year old father from the Republican Party. He voted Democratic for the first time in his life this time around, and was proud when Biden won the election. In his words, "I did not fight in two wars to defend a country that produces this type of politicians and idiocy. I cannot vote for a party that allows this to happen." Rock on, Dad!!!

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TPJ (MA)'s avatar

America is in danger of losing something very important in politics: the concept of a Loyal Opposition. It ensures continuity from one administration to another, particularly through the peaceful transfer of power. Also central is the notion that minority parties can legitimately criticize, even oppose, the government without automatically committing treason or a crime. The origins lie in late 17C England after the "Glorious" Revolution of 1688, as the country moved from the turmoil of the Stuart era into the more stable and prosperous 18C. It actually predates democracy, first functioning to moderate conflict between Court (royal) and Country (parliamentary) aristocratic factions. Gradually it extended to party rivalries and ultimately all kinds of representative government.

Loyal opposition may be codified as in the UK and other Commonwealth countries, or have more the status of tradition as in the US. It can serve as a needed check on government authority, but also to prevent government from exercising any authority. That latter weakness, as exploited by the GOP, is now destabilizing the country in dangerous and unpredictable ways. When the opposition won't accept election results, allow peaceful power transfer, or renounce violence as an instrument of policy, its disloyalty threatens the entire foundation of the nation's political system. In 1861 Lincoln expressed its essence: "We must settle this question now -- whether in a free government the minority have the right to break it up whenever they choose. If we fail, it will go far to prove the incapability of the people to govern themselves." It is essential to know what's at risk before it is gone forever.

(Written mostly from memory, so pardon any errors)

S Pincus, 1688: The First Modern Revolution

J Plumb, The Growth of Political Stability in England

https://www.yalelawjournal.org/essay/the-loyal-opposition

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Loyal_opposition

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