For all the talk, here and elsewhere, about the religious-right activists who bolt from the Republican Party if Rudy Giuliani is the presidential nominee, it’s worth considering whether there are other schisms — and how deep they run.
The question came up during yesterday’s debate for the GOP presidential candidates.
MATTHEWS: Congressman Paul, do you promise to support the nominee of the Republican Party next year?
PAUL: Not right now I don’t, not unless they’re willing to end the war and bring our troops home, not unless they’re willing to look at excessive spending. [..]
MATTHEWS: Okay. Let me try that by a couple of gentlemen on the right over here. Mr. Tancredo, would you pledge now to support the nominee of your party?
TANCREDO: You know, I’ve said I don’t know how many times that I am absolutely tired and sick and tired of being forced to go to the polls and say I’m going to make this choice between the lesser of two evils. I really don’t intend to do that again. I am hoping, of course, that whoever we nominate will be the principal flag carrier for the Republican Party, but if that is not the case, no, then I will not.
Even Sen. Sam Brownback, a party loyalist, hedged on the question. He said he’d support the nominee of the party, assuming he’s “somebody that is pro-growth and pro- life.” Matthews followed, “But if not, if they are not, would you still support them?” Brownback didn’t say.
So, for those keeping score at home, if Rudy Giuliani is the Republican nominee for president, James Dobson and the theocons, Ron Paul and his throng of supporters, Tom Tancredo and the xenophobes, and even cultural conservative Sam Brownback all plan to withhold their political support.
Hmm.
Now, I think we can chalk some of this up to primary-season bravado — there were plenty of Howard Dean fans who vowed to stay home if John Kerry won the nomination, and there’s no evidence of that actually happening. After the convention(s), parties have a history of coming together, even if that means a lot of nose-holding.
But I can’t help but think, if Romney (or McCain, or Thompson) really wanted to make an issue of this, the extent of this opposition seriously undermines Giuliani’s campaign pitch. His basic stump speech has almost nothing to do with his policy positions or ideas for the future, and everything to do with a) constant references to 9/11; and b) an argument that he can win the general election. The argument is predicated on the idea that Giuliani, and only Giuliani, can keep the right together while appealing to independents and some Dems.
But isn’t this pitch a much tougher sell when various parts of the party keep saying that under no circumstances will they support a Giuliani candidacy?
If I were a speechwriter for any of the other competitive Republican hopefuls, I’d start emphasizing this like crazy: “In 2008, we need a leader who can unite the party, then unite the nation. The former mayor of New York thinks he can do both, when in fact he’ll do neither. We can’t take the chance of facing a unified Democrat [sic] machine with a Republican Party that’s tearing itself apart.”
Something to look out for.