Republican Radicalism Flourishes in Iowa

Republican Radicalism Flourishes in Iowa



Iowa has become a petri-dish‌ of Republican radicalism

When Tim⁤ Scott,‌ a senator from South Carolina, ‍stepped onto a​ stage at the Iowa State⁤ Fair in Des Moines on August 15th, his first topic was​ how brilliant the woman interviewing him​ was. That‌ was Kim Reynolds, ⁢the state’s Republican governor, who this year has stolen the limelight from the Des‍ Moines ​Register, which traditionally has given visiting‌ politicians a⁤ literal ‍soapbox at the fair, by hosting⁣ her own series of‌ interviews⁢ with⁤ Republican candidates⁢ for president. “When your ⁣governor passes monumental ‍school choice…it gets my attention. And frankly, I celebrate ⁤her⁣ success,” said Mr Scott, ‍as Ms ⁣Reynolds, dressed in cowboy boots, beamed⁣ out at‌ the crowd. “Education ⁤is⁣ the closest​ thing to ⁣magic,” he went on. ‌And ⁢“no state‌ is doing it better” than Iowa.

The reform Mr Scott was referring to is‍ a bill that Ms ⁣Reynolds‌ signed in January, which allows almost any Iowan parent ​to apply for ⁢a voucher ⁤from the state to pay ⁣private-school ‌fees. By⁢ August 4th, over 18,500 applications had been approved, meaning that almost 4% of the total number of ​school ‍pupils in the ⁤state will be ⁢starting this school year at private schools courtesy of the Iowan taxpayer. The voucher bill ​is‌ just the most consequential (and controversial)‌ of a slew of conservative laws that ‌Ms Reynolds‌ has acceded to this ⁣year.⁢ The dozen or more ⁤wannabe Republican candidates flocking to her state may‌ have only a limited hope of beating Donald⁤ Trump in next​ year’s caucuses. ‌But⁤ they at least ‌get to⁣ visit a ⁤place ‍where ​Republicans⁤ are almost completely triumphant. Iowa, which a decade ago was purple-ish, has become a ⁤petri-dish of right-wing radicalism.

The radicalism comes from the fact that ⁤the Republican Party now totally ⁤dominates the state, and Ms Reynolds ‌the Republican Party here. Though⁢ Iowa has been turning more red ‍for a​ decade, ‌such emphatically right-wing policymaking ⁢had to wait ⁤until this year. In May 2022, a weaker…

2023-08-17 08:33:27
Article from www.economist.com
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