As you may have already heard, TV preacher Pat Robertson went on the offensive on behalf of Harriet Miers yesterday, suggesting that Republican senators had better get in line behind the White House agenda. Or else.
“You know, when you look at the people who are supporting Miers — Richard Land, who is faith commissioner for the Southern Baptists, which is 14, 15, 16 million members; Jerry Falwell has endorsed her; Jim Dobson has endorsed her; Jay Sekulow has endorsed her; yours truly has endorsed her.
“And I think these so-called ‘movement conservatives’ don’t have much of a following, the ones that I’m aware of. And you just marvel, these are the senators, some of them, who voted to confirm the general counsel of the ACLU to the Supreme Court. And she was voted in almost unanimously.
“And you say, now they’re going to turn against a Christian? Who is a conservative? Picked by a conservative president? And they’re going to vote against her for confirmation? Not on your sweet life — if they want to stay in office.”
On the surface, it’s fascinating enough that Robertson would make such a threat, but I think this is important for a few other reasons.
Robertson has identified the division within the right — and seems intent on exacerbating it. Notice, for example, that he highlighted the support Miers has received from five high-profile conservatives. What do all five have in common? Land, Falwell, Dobson, Sekulow, and Robertson are all from the religious right faction of the GOP. The fight, in other words, pits the Taliban wing against everyone else.
Indeed, Robertson seemed intent on picking a fight, dismissing “so-called ‘movement conservatives'” as unimportant, at least as compared to the theocratic wing of the party. Sorry, Limbaugh, Kristol, Will, Noonan, Buchanan, Krauthammer, and conservative bloggers everywhere; as far as Robertson is concerned, you have no followers, no clout, and no credibility.
Newsweek’s Howard Fineman said yesterday that the “long-predicted ‘conservative crackup’ is at hand.” For his part, Robertson is swinging a sledgehammer, hoping to move the collapse along.
Also worth considering is how this pulls far-right senators in competing directions. Fineman also said that he expects that “any GOP 2008 hopeful who wants evangelical support — people like Sam Brownback, Rick Santorum and maybe even George Allen — will vote against Miers’s confirmation in the Senate.”
From where I sit, this makes sense. Most of the far-right base is livid with Bush, and presidential hopefuls are looking at this as an ideal opportunity to show some independence from the White House and impress primary voters with a stand on principle. Robertson is saying the opposite; that these would-be Republican nominees will suffer unless they follow his advice and that of Dobson, Falwell, et al.
Brownback, Santorum, Allen, and others will have to decide which power brokers really have power. Vote against Miers and earn the support of Limbaugh’s listeners and Weekly Standard readers or vote for her and pick up the 700 Club crowd.
Which side carries more weight? We’re about to find out, but if I were a betting man, I wouldn’t put money on Robertson.