Compromise does not mean that everyone gets everything they want. Rather it means that everyone's stake in the governing process is reasonably considered in the laws and regulation that are legislated and that measures are taken in the system of government to ensure that everyone is equally protected from one-sided positions that exist in authoritarian rule. The goal is majority opinion tempered with reasonable consideration of minority positions.
The ideologues who are executing the Republican agenda these days seem to have totally abandoned the concept of compromise by refusing to accept anything less that total implementation of their agenda with no modifications. The are the party of 'No' when they are a minority, and their majority persona is a shameless display of self-indulgence as they tear through everything to get what they want.
The first major assaults on our spirit of compromise occurred in the mid-1990's budget battles where Republican heavy handedness in the budget process actually closed the Federal government for several weeks. These Federal government shutdowns of 1995 and 1995–96 were the result of conflicts between Democratic President Bill Clinton and the Republican Congress over funding in the 1996 federal budget.
The government shutdown resulted from Clinton's veto of the spending bill passed by the Republican-controlled Congress. This shutdown put government workers on furlough and suspended non-essential services for a total of 27 days, and they were not popular with voters. Republicans tended to avoid this tactic for years, but as recently as January 2018, the tactic resurfaced with another brief government shutdown that occurred after a budget bill failed to pass the Senate because the majority of Democrats voted against it.
Republicans have continued to show hostility to the principle of compromise even when they are in the minority. The minority Republican caucus during the Obama administration made unprecedented use of the filibuster procedure to block virtually everything proposed by the president and the Democratic majority. This overuse of the filibuster actually created an an embarrassing moment of filibuster self-abuse when Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) filibustered a bill that he himself had introduced only hours earlier in the 2011 debt-ceiling standoff.
Another symptom of Republican contempt of compromise is the deliberate undoing of all the executive orders from the previous administration during the Trump administration. Instead of working ahead to the future, all the matters of the past had to be erase to start again in an uncompromising manner to get everything they want.
It is not uncommon for a new president to change things especially when succeeding someone from the other party. Trump openly took this change to a new level by not just steering the country in a different direction but by actively dismantle everything that was established by his predecessor. He has been wholly committed to reversing the accomplishments of its predecessor.
Instead of focusing on what he could build, Trump seem far more comfortable destroying Obama's policy legacy than in forward thinking to development of for what will follow. Trump's penchant for destroying the past is not accompanied by progressive new ideas. He appears to only be intent on tearing Obama's legacy down which may actually be right in line with his hard-line supporters agenda.
The full force of this assault on the spirit compromise is best illustrated by the Republican approach to the Federal Judicial Branch. Federal and state government system in this country have a of checks and balances of the three branches of Executive to enforce the laws, Legislature to make the laws, and Judicial to interpret the laws. Each branch has a role to ensure the integrity and fairness of government actions. The executive and legislature are elected officials and the Judicial judges are appointed by a process of executive nomination followed by legislative confirmation.
Since Trump was elected, a long standing Senate procedural rule requiring a 60 super-majority for Supreme Court nominee confirmation has been changed to a simple majority. With this new simple majority in place, they are confirming very young perhaps to point of being inexperience to create a long lasting partisan impression of the judicial system. Their confirmation feeding frenzy has result in two Supreme Court appoints and a record number of other judges is a very short order of time that has limited candidate vetting. Details of this feeding frenzy will be provided in a separate post.
The Republican agenda has abandoned the approach of consensus building compromise in favor of a more authoritarian approach of our way or the highway. At every turn, they obstruct and bully to the point they are incapable of consensus governing. To them, a will of the majority that is not inline with their strict agenda of the few is an obstacle that needs to be overcome. Their extreme unwillingness to compromise has made the Federal government completely unable to operate effectively to the point that everybody can see it, but unfortunately, not everyone see the real cause.
The Republican agenda is to impose minority positions on the majority in an authoritarian manner that is not in the spirit of our consensus opinion democracy. They hope to accomplish this goal with voter suppression, gerrymandering, and completely disregarding the will of the majority as they impose their authoritarian rule.