They called it "the Republican Revolution", but revolutions sometimes eat their children.
They promised a new focus on the middle class, yet, adjusted for inflation, the middle class was earning less when Ronald Reagan left office than when he was elected. Today, the middle class earns less in real dollars than they did in 1970, yet the earnings of the top one percent have increased over six hundred percent.
They promised balanced budgets, yet no republican president since world war II ever balanced the national budget. They called the Democrats "Tax and Spend", yet the Republicans had another plan, spend the same or more, but don't raise taxes: not a recipe for success.
George Bush waged two, very expensive wars, but would not relent on his pre-war tax cuts. Math was never his best subject.
Instead of delivering on the things Americans wanted from them, they brought in an agenda nobody asked for. Like making abortion and death penalty laws even more divisive than they already were.
They sought to break down the barrier of church and state that had been so successful for us with prayer in school and revisiting the Scopes Monkey Trial and they maximized the mistakes of an already woefully unsuccessful drug policy that benefited no one but organized crime.
The Republican Revolution came in with great hope and great promise, but we were never able to take delivery of that promise.
It's not like we didn't give them a chance to follow through with their plan. Twenty-Eight of the last forty years saw a Republican President.
For the next two years, the Republicans are completely out of power in two of the three branches of government. Let us hope they use this time for self reflection on how and why they could never deliver on their promises and come back with a new focus on the things that are really important to the American people.
If they can't do that, then let them stay out of power until they do.
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