I'm a Democrat who infiltrated the Republicans. Why? Because we need 2 healthy parties.

Why would a Democrat official join a Republican confab? To help the Grand Old Party.
Why would a Democrat official join a Republican confab? To help the Grand Old Party.

With the threat of authoritarianism looming and a hostile faction threatening a democratic nation, it is incumbent upon us to support and coordinate with the insurgency.

I’m not talking about Ukraine. I am describing Democrats supporting Republican refugees within the insurgency of the GOP, people who belonged to the party of Reagan and now find themselves impressed into the party of Trump.

That’s why I traveled to Washington, D.C., to take part in the Principles First conference, a gathering of moderate Republicans many of whom are actively working to restore the GOP and cleanse it of Trumpism.

I don’t root for GOP to self-destruct

Some of my Democratic colleagues might wonder why this was a worthwhile endeavor for someone working to elect Democrats?

Shouldn’t I be enjoying the implosion of the GOP?

No. Our democracy works best with a two-party system, in which both bodies operate in good faith for the best of our nation. One-party dominance is not the answer. So while I work to elect Democrats, I also want to help eliminate extremists from the GOP.

Both parties have their bad eggs, but only one has been hijacked by them. Yes, there has been political warfare since the founding of America. Political parties have shifted and evolved throughout our history, but members of both sides ultimately always worked together for our common interests.

We have never had one party with such blatant anti-American sentiment as the modern GOP. The party of George H.W. Bush has been overrun by Putinites, insurrectionists and conspirators.

They have isolated the moderates in their ranks who still believe in our democratic republic. This has led to the Democratic Party being the only safe option for voters. This is not sustainable for our government.

It impairs our ability to legislate and puts us on a burning high-wire every election cycle, repeatedly presenting the stark choice between authoritarianism and democracy.

What’s happens when Dems lose?

You wouldn’t want a professional basketball team to play in the finals against a team of suicide bombers. Yet that’s what we have been seeing in our elections – one party endeared to our democratic norms, the other overrun by fanatics.

One bad performance for Democrats could send us into the abyss. In that scenario, we had better be sure the right kind of Republican is holding key elected offices when democracy is threatened

The reality is the GOP is not a monolith. Many Republicans are being held hostage within their party by radical elements. It should not be assumed that they identify with them.

Most of these hostages are willing and able to build a coalition. In fact, when I was the director of communications for the Arizona Democratic Party in 2020, speaking to this audience, was a key component of our strategy and it paid off.

I want to elevate GOP moderates

It is not inevitable that the Republicans of yore will reclaim their party without help. So I went to engage with Republicans in hopes of identifying collaborative ways to elevate moderates in their party primaries — funding PACs, working together to dismantle radical candidates and elected officials, establishing sound communications strategies, nationwide candidate recruitment, and more.

There were many like-minded people at Principles First.

Several voiced support for President Joe Biden and democratic policies. The event included Rep. Adam Kinzinger (R-Illinois), Bill Kristol and Maricopa (Ariz.) County Recorder Stephen Richer, and it honored heroes like U.S. Capitol Police Officer Harry Dunn and Lt. Col. Alexander Vindman, a director of the National Security Council and valued Ukraine expert who played a key role in the first impeachment proceedings against Trump.

Most of the people I interacted with identified themselves as being lost in the political wilderness, cut out of today’s GOP but still beholden to the traditional principles of their pre-Trump party.

Most notably, they recognized the value of a strong two-party system. When I asked people why they didn’t just leave their party to become Democrats or independents, many of them, like my Republican colleague Adrian Bakke, answered “Because I was here first. This is my party, I can’t abandon it to this.”

I had plenty of disagreements with attendees on a myriad of issues. But our most concrete areas of common ground were that Jan. 6 was an insurrection, Trumpism is bad, Putin is evil, and “Let’s go Brandon” is a dumb slogan.

In the event the Trump fever doesn’t break before 2024, forgotten Republicans in their party should reach out to Democrats. I encourage Democrats to reach back across the chasm.

We need to help them reclaim their party so that we can get back to competing against people we disagree with, not people hell-bent on upending democracy. Coalitions are what bring change, not one-party messaging.

Trust me, I want Democrats to win. I’m not doing this because I support the policies of the traditional Republican Party, nor am I doing this because I want more obstructionists in moderate clothing (see our senior senator).

I want our commonsense policies adopted at the state and federal level. But I also want what’s best for our republic in the long term.

Matt Grodsky is vice president and director of public affairs at Matters of State Strategies. He previously served as the director of communications for the Arizona Democratic Party from 2019 to 2021. He is an Arizona Democratic Party state committee member. Follow him Twitter: @mattgrodsky.

This article originally appeared on Arizona Republic: I'm a Democrat who infiltrated the GOP because we need 2 healthy parties