In both war and politics, a
basic, yet highly effective, tactic is to divide your enemy before a conflict.
In war, this tactic involves splitting off and isolating portions of opposing
forces in order to make the smaller group easier to deal with. In politics, the
concept of dividing and conquering involves fracturing the opposing ideology’s
factions into separate groups and utilizing their divisions to reduce the
opposing party’s ability to react as a whole.
The conservative movement has
virtually taken over the Republican Party, but there are real fissures within
the party that can be used to split the party. The modern Republican Party is divided
into several major factions: Christian conservatives, neoconservatives,
libertarian conservatives, and corporate conservatives. While all of these
conservative groups coexist within the conservative movement, their ideologies
are often in conflict.
Here are a few examples of such
conflicts between conservative factions:
- Libertarian conservatives often disagree with other types of conservatives and are marginalized for it; we see this division manifest in the exclusion of libertarians (ex. Ron Paul) on the national stage of the Republican Party by party elites. Libertarians don’t support the religious policies of the Christian conservatives, the cronyism of the corporate conservatives or the wars of the neoconservatives.
- Christian conservatives are often focused upon promoting “Christian values” (attacking gays, stopping abortion, etc.) and are willing to sacrifice virtually all other policy to achieve these social goals—if economic conservatism or foreign policy conservatism conflicts with their social conservatism, Christian conservatives usually disregard foreign policy and economic policy to pursue their social policy.
Once the conservative movement—a political
movement with a very high level of party discipline—is unable to retain its unity, it will be
possible for progressives to convince dissatisfied (or simply more reasonable)
portions of the conservative movement to break ranks and deal. As long as the
conservative movement remains unified and punishes any deviation from accepted
policy choices (ex. purging pro-choice conservatives), there is little hope for
progressives to achieve a favorable result from political negotiations.
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