The 2010 uprising is depicted as the moment the base finally began to eclipse the establishment, paving the way for the total populist takeover in 2016. The Trump Inflection Point
The alliance with the Moral Majority, which brought religious fundamentalism into the party’s core strategy. American Psychosis - David Cornepub
In American Psychosis: A Historical Investigation of How the Republican Party Went Crazy , David Corn provides a scathing genealogical map of the modern GOP, arguing that the party’s current state is not a sudden "Trumpian" aberration, but the culmination of a 70-year courtship with the far-right fringe. The Core Thesis: A Long Fuse The 2010 uprising is depicted as the moment
Corn posits that Donald Trump didn’t change the Republican Party; he simply stopped pretending. Trump recognized that the "fringe" elements—nativism, conspiratorial thinking, and anti-establishment rage—were actually the party’s main engine. By removing the "polite" filter used by figures like McCain or Romney, Trump fully realized the "psychosis" Corn describes. Conclusion The Core Thesis: A Long Fuse Corn posits
The essay of the book focuses on how the GOP establishment repeatedly made "deals with the devil." Corn highlights several key eras:
The adoption of the "Southern Strategy" and the courting of segregationist impulses.
Corn’s central argument is that for decades, Republican leadership has weaponized paranoia, conspiracy theories, and resentment to gain power. While the party’s public face often maintained a veneer of traditional conservatism, Corn argues they consistently "fed the beast" of extremism behind the scenes. He traces this back to the early 1950s, starting with Joe McCarthy’s Red Scare and moving through the John Birch Society’s influence in the 60s. Strategic Alliances with Extremism