Merry Christmas, everyone!
Small-Scale Question Sunday for December 25, 2022
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Notes -
In the party? The House vote for the $40B aid package last May was 149-57 in favor, and support is probably going to be lower going forward. Among the grassroots? It's about 50-50, and dropping quickly, with the most unwavering support ("for as long as it takes, even if American households have to pay higher gas and food prices as a consequence") down to 33% among Republicans.
Trawling through conservative forums I still see a lot of moral support for Ukraine, but I also see a lot of the "these big bills are how the government-military-industrial complex launders money" thinking that I used to think was a solidly left-wing position. The median right-wing belief today seems to be approaching "Okay, the tankies are wrong to support Russia, but is it really our job to get involved?", and it really does seem like a funhouse mirror of what you'd have expected from the two sides of the culture war 60 years ago.
But how about the disintegration of Yugoslavia in the 90s? Bill Clinton was gung ho for intervention, while Senate Republicans mostly tended to the position "this conflict is literally in Europe's backyard, why can't they solve the local problem, since logistics couldn't be easier?"
Republican foreign policy at a grassroots level tends to be borderline isolationist, unless there is a clear threat to American interests.
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I think it has a lot to do with how Dems do absolutely zero to explain any of this or gain any bipartisan support (or at least I do not notice any outreach effort). I mean, they do it like that all over the map - "shut up, you deplorable bigot, you are a Putin's asset!" is heard much more than "let me lay out the argument for why it may be in our mutual interests to do this". But in this particular case it is really not clear for people why they must sacrifice to support Ukraine, especially if so many of their other interests are already has been sacrificed. There are good arguments, including those that the Red Tribe would accept if given the chance, but nobody from the left that I have seen takes any serious effort to do this. And as such, it gets more and more painted as a Blue tribal behavior. Especially after Blues have already done so many things under the guise of "it's an emergency, no time to discuss or explain anything" - and now they are doing the same again. So people are viewing it as a pattern and develop an allergy to any measures done in this way.
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Surprising gop support is so low. 10 years ago gop would be solid support.
The fundamental issue is the war people are now the GOP’s cultural enemies. And they’ve been lied to too much by the “expert” class. The fundamental issue is Liz Cheney (and her dad) have played the GOP base too many times and groups have trouble thinking for themselves and disassociating an issue from the people who run the programs. So in many ways it’s surprising how strong support for the war is in the GOP since the people who have fucked them the most are the neocons.
Probably doesn't help that the Biden family has some corrupt ties with Ukraine.
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