Which means, of course, that it was a loss for the Republicans. Just the latest in a long line of losses that stretches back the last two decades.
And what they have lost goes way beyond mere elections. They have lost their anchor in the fabric of the world. Some out there will invariably say that Mitt Romney was not elected because he was merely unlikeable; he let his true colors come through too often, and the American people decided they just weren't as into Piero Manzoni as his strategists had anticipated. But it goes so much deeper than that.
The first problem the GOP has is that it's trying to appeal to an America that no longer exists.
This is only a slight oversimplification. The demographic the GOP has always depended on to vote them into office -- the white, upper-crust churchgoing men with trophy wives and two-point-five children -- has been steadily shrinking since the late 1980s. America has gotten browner, gayer, and less concerned with who created the universe.
Compounding this is that the GOP depends on that white, upper-crust churchgoing man to be not just staunchly conservative, but fearful of change. Because that fear is to their power what the One Ring is to Sauron. It's the basis for everything they do. They can't use gays, atheists, and brown people as threats to the American way of life unless the white men they're pandering to have enough sphinctre-loosening terror to prey upon. And that fear has been steadily dissipating for the last eight years. Ever since Massachusetts made it clear that people can marry who they want, and the Earth will keep spinning and the sky will stay up because astrophysics and human sexuality have the same effect on each other as iocaine powder does on The Dread Pirate Roberts.
This is not to say that there aren't still some scared, angry white guys out there. There are plenty. That Obama's win in this race was significantly less of a landslide victory than it was in 2008 against a far less extreme opponent and with record numbers of minority voters is clear evidence of that. But there just aren't enough paranoid, angry white people to sustain the GOP as they are.
The second problem for the GOP is, quite frankly, the internet and the age of free and immediate information that it has fostered. Thirty years ago, it could take days or even weeks of research to refute a false claim in a political ad or a debate, and even longer to put that new information into people's hands. Now, with the internet being more popular than television as a news source, people all over the country can fact-check what you say as you say it and put that information out there before you even know what your next lie is going to be about. You can't just swiftboat your way into office anymore. As this election and the 2008 election have proven, people do care about facts. And now that those facts are available on-demand, wherever and whenever they're needed, people care about them more than ever.
The third, and biggest problem, is that the GOP refuses to acknowledge the first two problems. It refuses to face reality, because reality is hard and unforgiving. It's a very childlike mentality of hoping that if they ignore unpleasant things, they will go away.
First, they selected Mitt Romney as their frontman. The upper-crustest, churchgoingest, angriest, whitest
It's a policy that clearly doesn't work anymore when not even the most blatant attempts at voter suppression since the Reconstruction Era could save their candidate.
What they must take from this election if they're ever going to win another one is that progress is like a glacier; slow, almost imperceptibly so at times, but ultimately unstoppable. And as with a glacier, you have three options when one is bearing down on you: 1) move forward with it, 2) get out of the way, or 3) get buried by it.
The GOP's fact-free fantasy bubble of being able to rely on lies and paranoid white men can't shield them any longer. The principle of evolution applies as much to politics as it does to biology: you either adapt, or you go extinct.
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