Wednesday, June 24, 2026

Fear of the Golden Elephant

A dramatic, painterly illustration of a red-haired woman standing before a massive weathered wooden cross inside a vast Gothic church. Her arms are extended along the horizontal beam, echoing the cross without restraint. She weareth a flowing cream dress that billoweth in the light—motion and intensity. Her head is tilted upward, eyes closed, expression uplifted—determination, sacrifice, spiritual yearning. Warm shafts of sunlight stream through tall arched windows, illuminating auburn hair, ancient timber grain, and floating dust. Deep shadows fill the nave. Religious symbolism, dramatic chiaroscuro, and a mood of contemplation, resilience, and transcendence.
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Evangelical propagandist Todd Starnes: Christians must support the GOP in spite of ‘how bad the Republicans have betrayed you’. {Right Wing Watch 23 June}

https://www.peoplefor.org/rightwingwatch/todd-starnes-says-voters-must-support-gop-regardless-how-bad-republicans-have

A dramatic, painterly illustration of a red-haired woman standing before a massive weathered wooden cross inside a vast Gothic church. Her arms are extended along the horizontal beam, echoing the cross without restraint. She weareth a flowing cream dress that billoweth in the light—motion and intensity. Her head is tilted upward, eyes closed, expression uplifted—determination, sacrifice, spiritual yearning. Warm shafts of sunlight stream through tall arched windows, illuminating auburn hair, ancient timber grain, and floating dust. Deep shadows fill the nave. Religious symbolism, dramatic chiaroscuro, and a mood of contemplation, resilience, and transcendence.
generated via ChatGPT

And so we see a prime example of how and why the GOP maintains such a powerful hold over large swathes of this country and its people. Regardless of one's views of the Republican Party, Todd Starnes is articulating a sentiment that hath become increasingly common among most professed Christians in the former United States: support the party no matter what, even when it disappoints thee. Loyalty to the cause, and to Donald Trump, supersedes dissatisfaction with the party. Consider Starnes’ own words, putting it all very starkly:

"I've been telling people, 'I don't care how bad the Republicans have betrayed you or have not done what [they] said they would do,' … It's not about them. It's about protecting President Trump at the end of the day. And it's about protecting the Supreme Court."

Not much nuance or room for interpretation there. It is plainly stated: loyalty to Trump and keeping hold of the high court are tantamount to any and all other considerations. It explains why the GOP is so difficult to hold electorally accountable. Voters who would otherwise punish a party for perceived and real failures instead view the alternative as the literal spawn of Satan. Rightly or wrongly, the Democratic Party is the most hated institution of any kind throughout middle America, particularly in the South, where Democrats once enjoyed overwhelming dominance. For these white, working-class types, opposition to Democrats is not merely political; it is cultural, religious, and deeply personal. 

A rich fantasy illustration of six women gathered beneath a vast cosmic sky dominated by Saturn. Centre, a red-haired woman in a flowing ivory gown raiseth her arms toward heaven, her face uplifted in anguish, longing, and supplication. Tears glisten on her cheeks; windblown hair catcheth the celestial light. Five companions in translucent dresses cluster close—some resting, others bowing in grief or exhaustion. Their expressions speak of sorrow, vulnerability, and shared burden. Behind, luminous nebulae, distant stars, and swirling clouds fill the heavens; Saturn’s immense rings arc dramatically. Warm golds, deep blues, and earth tones create a dreamlike atmosphere. Collective suffering, consolation, resilience, and the search for meaning amid an overwhelming and indifferent cosmos.
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The Democratic Party did itself no favours in 2024 when it cast President Biden aside in favour of a candidate who proved incapable of winning the confidence of enough voters to prevent the return of a convicted felon to the White House. Indeed, the woman was unelectable from the very start; including for reasons that should not be, of course, but they are. Furthermore, she has not acquitted herself well at any point in her political career; it was not the time for a grand political experiment, not when it was so obvious and apparent how far rightward the winds were blowing in 2023, 2024, and continuing onward to the present moment. 

Fair or not, the election reinforced existing perceptions of Democratic weakness and disorganisation. And I do not see tangible moves being made to at least attempt to alter these perceptions. So long as the white working-class remains the most powerful voting bloc, the Democrats have to win at least some portion of them. And it is as though they do not even try, or the attempts they do make are clumsy and not well thought out (see nominating Tim Walz as the running mate in ‘24, or what hath become of Sen. John Fetterman).

Yet Republican strength cannot be explained solely by Democratic mistakes. Right-wing media ecosystems, partisan identity, religious affiliation, geographical sorting, nationalistic and anti-globalist sentiment, and decades of heated cultural conflict over a range of issues from abortion to zoning have all contributed to an environment in which voters increasingly define themselves by what they oppose even more so than by what they support. In this atmosphere, criticism of Republican leaders simply fails to translate into electoral consequences for the GOP. How else can we explain Trump being restored to power by the voters in 2024 after the myriad failures, embarrassments, and abuses of power previously, to say nothing of being a convicted felon?

Rightly or wrongly, the Democratic brand is toxic: if they hope to regain durable political power, they may need not merely new candidates, but a broader reconfiguration of how they present themselves to the electorate. Perhaps they retire the ‘Democratic Party’ brand name altogether, in the manner of how major corporations will rebrand when they have become toxic in the public eye (think Philip Morris becoming Altria, perhaps; or Lord Elon changing Twitter to ‘X’, though everyone still calls it ‘Twitter’, but I digress). Revivals rarely begin in Washington, though; they begin in town halls, state legislatures, school committees, and local communities. And in these places is where the Democrats have lost the most ground in recent decades.

On the current trajectory, Republicans will enjoy significant institutional advantages for years to come. Gerrymandering; favourable electoral geography; peer pressure upon individuals from family, society, and church; and the structure of American government all provide benefits that make Democratic victories more difficult than raw national vote totals suggest. It is not enough for Republicans to perform poorly in office if voters remain entirely unwilling to embrace the alternative. Especially, if only one alternative is ever allowed or considered. I suppose, going back to the 1790s, Americans have always demanded their politics be us against them, a team sport, and have never been keen on nuance. George Washington warned us about this in his farewell address, even as ‘the spirit of party’ was already overtaking the nation’s populace.

Whether a temporary realignment or the beginning of something more permanent remains an open question, though I am heavily leaning toward the latter. American history is filled with moments when observers believed one party had achieved lasting dominance, only for political circumstances to change... but that was then. Concerns about democratic erosion are never without foundation in the best of times, but today we are at red alert. To put it mildly. What ‘y’all’ voted for.

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🪐💔 #QueSeraSera 𓅨 🕈

Copyright 2026, Arthur Newhook.