If the mods choose to move this to the politics section I'd understand, but I thought this "media analysis" article was interesting. It basically explains how Rush Limbaugh and right-wing talkers were credited with the GOP gaining dominance in the 1990s, so much so that Limbaugh got a "thank you" call from Newt Gingrich, and the incoming freshman class made Limbaugh an honorary member - but since that time conservative talkers and media outlets have moved so far to the right that they're openly criticizing anyone in the GOP who is at all willing to reach across the aisle, negotiate and compromise. This article makes the argument that those talkers and folks in the media are largely responsible for the current political divisions in the country, and indeed, the mess that's happening with the GOP and their inability to even elect a Speaker of the House from within their own ranks:
www.politico.com
Republican Chaos Has Conservative Media Fuming. It’s Their Fault It Happened.
Talk radio and Fox News hosts created the political incentives that fueled Kevin McCarthy’s ouster and today’s speakership drama.
The leaders of conservative talk radio and cable news have spent years assailing GOP congressional leaders — including McCarthy — and they are largely responsible for turning far-right rebels like Gaetz into stars. Going back to the 1990s, conservative media created the political ecosystem in which torching and targeting Republican leaders is good politics on the right.
In 1994, the burgeoning conservative talk radio empire provided crucial support that helped catapult the GOP to control of the House for the first time in 40 years. The contributions of talk radio were so great that the day after that fall’s electoral earthquake, a jubilant soon-to-be-speaker Newt Gingrich called Rush Limbaugh, the king of talk radio, and thanked him for helping Republicans. The Republican freshman class made Limbaugh an honorary member, and greeted him like a rockstar at their orientation.
Meanwhile talk radio, which would be joined in 1996 by Fox News, was a business. The goal was to get the largest audience possible to tune in for the longest possible time. And that demanded entertaining, engaging programming above all else.
Explaining why Republicans had to backtrack from promises and cut bipartisan deals, however, was neither entertaining nor engaging. It was dry, boring — and unsatisfying. Hosts therefore never hesitated to blast the GOP for such betrayals or to boost rank-and-file members trying to pressure leadership.
As former House Speaker John Boehner later explained to POLITICO Magazine, [Mark] Levin, whose show went national in 2006, “went really crazy right and got a big audience, and he dragged [Sean] Hannity to the dark side. He dragged Rush to the dark side. And these guys—I used to talk to them all the time. And suddenly they’re beating the living shit out of me.”
In Limbaugh’s mind, Boehner and his colleagues had “no interest” in defending conservative values because they “really aren’t conservatives.” Talk radio’s king made clear that because of the gulf between the sides, “There is no compromise. None! There is only concession. That’s all that can happen.” He repeatedly urged Republicans to stick to their principles even though they’d get blamed if the country went over the cliff.