I'm not posting this to start a fight with you, but you should consider what you're saying. You should also think a little about what's going on. The GOP has been "scourge"-like since Newt Gingrich and the so-called "Contract for America" (which really meant that they were using wedge issues so they could solidify a contract with corporate America). But the GOP has also experienced huge changes in the past 30 years that render it almost unrecognizable from the previous Republican Party that existed in the 1950s and 1960s. That GOP had an interest in the New Deal/Great Society state. The current GOP wants to dismantle it in favor of Reagan-esque privatization.
The current GOP--Newt's GOP--has been hijacked and has been taken over in the form of a hostile takeover by the tea party caucus. Tea party people are are generally low-information voters who favor extreme positions and fail to see the interconnectedness of things. Their biggest flaw is that they shout opposition to "big government" all day long, but have a boner for cops and wars and federal government money to defense contractors to build silly little weapons that'll likely never be used.
The other thing I'd like you to consider is that a one-party state is no state anybody wants to be a part of. One party systems are usually tyrannical. And that's what the GOP wants--especially the Trumpers. They want an eradication of all dissent.
Back in the olden days, the differences in the parties were a little easier to contend with. The GOP believed government should not be used to help people, but should be used to help big business. The Democrats believed that government power should be used to correct social ills and to help people. That paradigm is now dead. Today the GOP, hijacked by Trump and the tea party wackos, wants to do a bunch of contradictory things, i.e. get rid of the federal government, but exert America's power overseas. The [mainstream] Democrats are like Republicans of old and just want to help big businesses grow wealth and power. The Progressive wing of the Democratic Party has had a resurgence, and connect with voters, but they don't have a legitimate seat among mainstream Democrats--the so-called "neo-liberals."