Human
Events...
GOP
war of
all against all?
by Patrick
J. Buchanan
01/10/2012
There still
exists a possibility that, come Jan. 20, 2013, we could have a
Republican
Senate and House, and a Republican president.
But there
is also a possibility that a Goldwater-Rockefeller-type family
bloodletting
could sunder the party and kick it all away.
America is
bored with Barack Obama. The young and the minorities are still with
him but
exhibit none of the excitement or enthusiasm of 2008.
Moreover,
we have been through three years of 23-25 million unemployed or
underemployed.
Our national debt is now larger than the national economy, approaching
Italian
proportions. The class warfare rhetoric is beginning to grate. A huge
majority
believes the nation is on the wrong course.
Who wants
four more years of this?
Democratic
hopes for 2012 hence hinge on that party’s ability to portray the
Republican
alternative as unacceptable if not intolerable. And the Republicans
have begun to
play into that script.
The GOP
field of candidates suddenly seems headed to a finale that will call to
mind
the last scene of Hamlet, the dead and dying everywhere, but no
Fortinbras to
restore order in the house.
In the
Sunday debate, Jon Huntsman accused Mitt Romney of virtually
questioning his
patriotism, when Mitt asked how he could serve as Obama’s man in
Beijing and be
a credible opponent of Obama.
“This
nation is divided ... because of attitudes like that,” said Huntsman.
Newt
Gingrich, who promised in Iowa not to go negative, now calls Mitt a
liar. A
super-PAC supporting Newt is about to paint Mitt as a Bain Capital
corporate
predator, a Gordon Gecko whose modus operandi was to swoop down on
troubled
companies, loot them, fire workers, leave a skeleton crew and move on.
Newt’s
bitterness is understandable.
A month
ago, he was surging. He had opened up a lead in national polls, moved
ahead in
Iowa, South Carolina and Florida, and, with the backing of the
Manchester Union-Leader,
was closing in on Mitt in New Hampshire.
From his
crisp debate performances, Newt had steadily risen from his disastrous
debut,
while one after another of his rivals -- Michele Bachmann, Rick Perry,
Herman
Cain -- had taken the lead and lost it.
Newt had
engineered a spectacular comeback, seemingly peaking at exactly the
right
moment, only weeks before the Iowa caucuses.
Came then
the Iowa blitz, round-the-clock air strikes from a Romney super-PAC.
Millions
were dumped into attack ads portraying Newt as a Beltway bandit who had
exploited his speaker’s ties to enrich himself, pocketing $1.6 million
from
Freddie Mac and millions more from Big Pharma to promote the Bush
prescription
drug benefit for seniors, the largest unfunded entitlement program of
the
century.
After weeks
of unreturned fire, Newt’s poll numbers had been cut in half. He
finished a
distant fourth in Iowa. Having come back from the dead once in this
primary
season, it is hard to see how he resurrects himself a second time,
given the
depth of his fall, his seemingly uncontrollable anger and the little
time he
has left.
Five weeks
ago, Newt looked like the GOP nominee. Now, his political career seems
about
over. Hence the desire for revenge. And with his friend Las Vegas
billionaire
Sheldon Adelson dumping $5 million into a super-PAC for Newt, his
allies have
the resources to exact retribution on Mitt for what Mitt’s friends did
to Newt.
Nor is this
the only bad blood.
In Iowa,
Ron Paul’s ads charged Newt with “serial hypocrisy” for claiming to be
a
conservative but leaving Congress to make millions working the system.
In New
Hampshire, Paul escalated, calling Newt a “chicken hawk” who clamors
for war on
Iran but ducked service when he could have gone and fought during
Vietnam.
Newt has
said that, should Paul become the nominee, he, Newt, could neither
endorse nor
vote for him. Paul’s supporters would reciprocate, were Newt to become
the
nominee.
Paul’s ads
also charge Rick Santorum with being a “corrupt” politician who
exploited his
12 years of Senate service to make millions on K Street.
Santorum’s
reply: “Ron Paul is disgusting.”
The
Republican candidates have gone beyond challenging each other’s records
and
positions to impugning their character.
Sunday, New
Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, a Romney surrogate, directly questioned
Huntsman’s
“integrity,” implying he had plotted his presidential campaign against
Obama
while serving as Obama’s man in Beijing.
He had
taken the king’s shilling and then sought to dethrone the king.
Such wounds
take time to heal. Some never do, and some will not be closed before
the
Republican convention opens in Tampa, Fla.
Then there
are the policy divides. Paul may well run second to Romney in delegates
and
demand that his ideas -- shutting U.S. military bases overseas,
downsizing the
American empire, getting a declaration of war from Congress before any
attack
on Iran -- be written into the platform.
How will a
hawkish Republican majority finesse that one?
To bring
this crowd together at Tampa, the GOP nominee may need the diplomatic
skills of
a Talleyrand or Metternich.
Read this
and other articles at Human Events
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