I imagine it’s pretty tough being a 10-term incumbent congressman facing a very tough re-election fight in a difficult campaign environment, but I don’t think Rep. Chris Shays (R-Conn.) is handling the pressure well.
Earlier this week, Shays highlighted what’s become of House Republican standards when he compared the Mark Foley scandal to Chappaquiddick, saying, “I know the speaker didn’t go over a bridge and leave a young person in the water, and then have a press conference the next day…. Dennis Hastert didn’t kill anybody.”
It was not only a cheap shot, it was an odd response to an ongoing political controversy. By Shays’ reasoning, House Republicans simply covered up for a sexual predator who was preying on teenagers for whom Congress was responsible. But as long as no one actually died, there’s no reason for voters to be upset. (New campaign slogan — “Vote GOP: You can’t accuse us of murder.”)
Today, whatever was left of Shays’ composure effectively disappeared.
Republican Rep. Christopher Shays said Friday the Abu Ghraib prison abuses were more about pornography than torture.
The congressman, who is in a tough re-election fight, said a National Guard unit was primarily responsible for the abuses.
“It was a National Guard unit run amok,” Shays said in a telephone interview with The Associated Press. “It was torture because sex abuse is torture. It was gross and despicable … This is more about pornography than torture.”
He really did say this; there’s even a video of it.
What’s more, this comes on the heels of Shays insisting, “Now I’ve seen what happened in Abu Ghraib, and Abu Ghraib was not torture.”
I mention this, not just because the comments are so jaw-dropping, but also to demonstrate what’s happened to congressional Republicans. Shays is one of the least conservative members of the House GOP caucus. By most standards, he’s a moderate who is willing to balk, publicly, at some of the more egregious excesses of the Republican leadership.
If Shays has gone off the deep end, what does it say about the rest of the party? If those who are supposed to be the most sensible start making painfully ridiculous arguments in public, what hope is there for the GOP?
To be fair, I should note that Shays seems to realize he went too far.
Shays said Friday he wished he had more fully explained his views at the debate. “I was maybe not as expansive as I needed to be,” he said. “Of course, the degrading of anyone is torture. We need to deal with it.”
Shays said his debate comments reflected the disturbing photos he has seen of Abu Ghraib abuses: “Naked Iraqis, naked Americans, Americans having sex … gross and despicable pictures.”
Shays is waging a bruising re-election fight against [Westport selectwoman Diane] Farrell.
“Once again, Chris is trying to back away from an earlier statement because it’s politically expedient,” Farrell said Friday. “It’s typical Chris.”
If Shays is falling apart, panic must really be setting in.