On Gamers and Breakers

Sunday’s NYT Magazine had an interesting article written by a Yale history professor named Timothy Snyder called “The American Abyss.” Read it if you get the chance.

The centerpiece of the article is a distinction between GOP “gamers” and “breakers.” Is it accurate, and is it complete?

Anything that describes Mitch McConnell as a “gamer” (i.e., a Republican who recognizes the systemic advantages the GOP has, and uses them for all he’s worth) clearly has some merit. However, I think the distinction falls short in some respects:

  1. There are serious ideological differences within the GOP, reflected in my four factions, that the article doesn’t consider;
  2. Some Republicans are neither “gamers” nor “breakers”: Susan Collins and Mitt Romney, for example.
  3. Cruz, Hawley, and probably most of the House members who tried to overturn the election aren’t really “breakers;” they’re just gaming the GOP base for their own personal advantage. They didn’t anticipate or welcome the riots; they just thought they could suck up to the base and fan the flames without creating any negative consequences. They were wrong.
  4. There are, as the article says, plenty of “breakers” within the party, but the vast majority of them are voters, not members of Congress.
  5. Donald Trump, the Flight 93 president, can certainly be described as the ultimate “breaker.” He damaged our institutions without creating anything to replace them except a malignant personal cult; the vacuum is being filled by furry Vikings and Mr. Zip-Tie. Will we recover? Much depends on Biden’s political skills; if life improves in the next four years, and the extreme right feels less threatened, the answer will be yes.