Former Arkansas governor and presidential contender Mike Huckabee  threatens that if Republicans embrace same-sex 
marriage  and ignore the religious right agenda, he will lead 
evangelicals  and 
social conservatives out of the 
GOP and form a third party. 
Republican leaders should take him up on his offer and let 'em walk!  Otherwise the extreme social conservatives will relegate the GOP to the dustbin  of history. 
The GOP's Civil War The GOP's 2012 election defeats have ignited a full-scale civil war between  the three factions within the Republican Party. 
The first faction consists in establishment conservatives who are social  engineers from the right. They accept the welfare state; they just want to  introduce market mechanisms to make programs like Social Security and Medicare  work better. They've even expanded the welfare state: George W. Bush created No  Child Left Behind and a new prescription drug entitlement; Mitt 
Romney created Romneycare, the model for  Obamacare. 
The second faction is made up of the social conservatives, including many  evangelicals like Huckabee. Their highest priorities include limiting the  liberty of gays to marry and banning abortion. They dream of imposing their  version of Christian values on America. Rick Santorum, former Pennsylvania  Senator, is quite clear about his faction's ideology: "This whole idea of  personal autonomy-I don't think that most conservatives hold that point of  view." He argues that "We're not the Libertarian Party, we're the Republican  Party." Many social conservatives even reject economic liberty. They want government  to manage markets and use entitlements to "strengthen the family." 
The third faction consists in the Goldwater-Reagan-style advocates of limited  government and individualism, a perspective that now manifest itself in the Tea  Party movement. Their greatest concern is runaway federal spending and debt, and  the expansion of federal power beyond all Constitutional limits, whether through  Obamacare or Republican programs. For them Job One is reining in government.  Kentucky Senator Rand Paul is their libertarian-leaning hero. 
What If Social Conservatives Leave? The best way to end the GOP civil war is to let Huckabee, Santorum, and their  followers leave. One might object that half of GOP primary voters in 2012 were  white evangelicals and that the party would be dead without them. But not all  evangelicals and social conservatives, however much they agree on same-sex  marriage and 
abortion, rank  these as the party's priorities. Indeed, surveys show that about half of Tea  Party activists are socially conservative while the other half are  libertarian-leaning. Not all, perhaps not even most, social conservatives and  evangelicals will leave. 
The evangelicals are an aging, shrinking part of the voter pool. Worse, they  scare away younger voters who are socially liberal. Romney only received 37  percent of the votes of 18-29 year-olds. And once young people vote two or three  times in a row for a particular party, they'll likely continue to vote that way  for the rest of their lives
.
The most dynamic element within the GOP has been the young Ron Paul  supporters who have little love for social conservatives who are bent on  managing their personal lives. GOP survival depends on harnessing the energy and  the votes of this group. Fewer "Huckabee's" in the party will make this task  much easier. 
New Blood Another potential source of new blood for the GOP is the new information-age  wealth creators. These Steve Jobs types are individualists and innovators who  love their work and who generally see private initiative rather than government  programs as the path to prosperity. But they loathe the perceived intolerance of  social conservatives. Fewer "Huckabee's" will make the GOP a more inviting place  to party. 
Romney received only 27 percent of the Hispanic vote. Yet by 2050, 30 percent  of the American population will be Hispanic. Heavily Catholic Hispanics tend to  be socially conservative. But they are most concerned about economic  opportunity, which solid free-market policies can offer. Unfortunately, the  GOP's social conservatives disproportionally favor harsh treatment for illegal  immigrants. Many Hispanics see them as callous and even racist. But  immigrants-legal or otherwise-tend to embody the drive for self-improvement  through hard work that Republicans should celebrate. Fewer Huckabee's will allow  the GOP to celebrate more Hispanic voters. 
A Modernist, Pro-Liberty Party The more sensible social conservatives would realize that with the limited  government promoted by a more libertarian GOP they'd have less fear for the  liberties they love, for example, the freedom to home school. And establishment  conservatives today are distancing themselves from many big-government programs  they once supported. They'd likely work with libertarians to establish true free  markets, which would offer opportunities that would obviate the need for welfare  state programs. 
A GOP minus the most extreme social conservatives and evangelicals would be a  modernist, pro-liberty party that could win elections by promoting individualist  values. 
Read more at 
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