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Republicans have embarked on an unrelenting acceleration of the culture wars. From Texas Gov. Greg Abbott's border security policies to Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis's war on Disney, the GOP is pushing rightward on cultural issues and throwing red meat to its base. And this isn't limited to far-right states. It's happening in swing states and states becoming more competitive, like Wisconsin and even Virginia.
Understanding why the GOP is catering to extreme voters, even in places where trying to appeal to moderates seems more politically expedient, requires scrutiny of U.S. political history.
The Founding Fathers feared political parties and demagogues, and designed institutions that would thwart them. But 20th-century changes to the constitutional system, especially the widespread adoption of primary elections in the 1970s, have distorted and weakened our democracy by creating a perverse incentive structure that rewards playing to unrepresentative extremists.
The founders never intended for direct democracy or political parties. They saw the constitutional system they designed — the Electoral College, indirect election of senators, etc. — as a bulwark against too much popular rule. The aim was to contain what they feared would become excessive democracy, while retaining sufficient elements of political representation to secure the Constitution's ratification.
Yet parties emerged quickly in the new American republic and only grew stronger in the early 19th century because of the efforts of Thomas Jefferson and Andrew Jackson, who breached old political norms to avenge past defeats.
By the 1830s, the political nominating convention emerged to select each party's candidates, who would then compete to win the appeal of voters in a fairly open democracy — at least for white men.