Another former Republican makes his case

Yesterday, we talked about John Cole giving up on the GOP. John went into considerable detail, and didn’t point to just one problem, but he did note that he’s ended up attacking old friends because he doesn’t know “how else to respond when people call decent men like Jim Webb a pervert for no other reason than to win an election.”

John, you’re not alone. Frank Schaeffer is a conservative columnist for the Dallas Morning News who describes himself as “a Christian, a writer, a military parent and a registered Republican.” In his column this week, Schaeffer explains why he, too, has decided to leave the GOP.

Apparently, it was an email circulated by campaign supporters of Sen. George Allen (R-Va.) that did the trick.

The message goes like this: “First, it was the Catholic priests, then it was Mark Foley, and now Jim Webb, whose sleazy novels discuss sex between very young teenagers. … Hmmm, sounds like a perverted pedophile to me! Pass the word that we do not need any more pedophiles in office.” Democrat James Webb is a war hero and former Marine, wounded in Vietnam and winner of the Navy Cross. He was writing about class and military issues long before me and has articulated the issue of how the elites have dropped the ball on military service in his classic novel Fields of Fire. By the way, that’s a book Tom Wolfe calls “the greatest of the Vietnam novels.”

Schaeffer noted that he’s been a Republican for years; his father was a famous evangelical theologian and friend to Ronald Reagan, Gerald Ford and the first President Bush; and Schaeffer himself has received handwritten letters from various members of the Bush family, including Barbara, thanking him for his books on military service.

“So I have every reason to stay in the Republicans’ good graces,” Schaeffer said, “but enough is enough. I’ve had it with Republican smears.”

My wife and I have reached the tipping point. We plan to go to town hall to dump our Republican voter registration and reregister as independents. I don’t care anymore what party someone is in. These days, what I care about is what they’re made of.

Wartime demands leaders with character and moral authority. The political party smearing Mr. Webb proves it has neither.

In the very short term, pieces like this one suggest the Allen campaign’s decision to go after Webb for his novels may be one of those gambles that has disastrous political consequences.

But in the more important long term, Schaeffer is pointing to a much bigger problem. If Allen’s campaign tactic were unusual for the modern-day GOP, it almost certainly wouldn’t have prompted Schaeffer to reach his “tipping point.” It’s part of a pattern — Republicans keep pushing the smear envelope, keeping trying to find out just how vicious they can be while getting away with it, and keep embracing patently dishonest campaign tactics in their desire to keep power for power’s sake.

I don’t doubt that some far-right activists thrive on these red-meat attacks, whether they have merit or not. But I can’t help but believe there are a fair amount of John Coles and Frank Schaeffers who repel from the obvious reality that the Republican Party is intent on undermining our discourse and poisoning politics.

On a number of issues, I’m probably not on the same page as Cole or Schaeffer. For that matter, both probably reject a Democratic agenda on policy grounds. But both of them, and others like them, deserve enormous credit for their integrity and consistency, and for showing the good sense to walk away from those who value power more than principle.

The only question I have is “what took them so long?” This issue has been readily apparent for, what, 6 election cycles now? “Fool me once, shame on you, fool me 6 times, I am a dense motherfather?” Incredible.

  • We need the Coles and the Schaeffers, and we need them to be the honest conservatives they are. Just like we need us to be the honest centrists and progressives and liberals we are. Out of the “stew” this creates, we’ve managed – up until the past six years – to stumble along and create something (to paraphrase Winston Churchill) that is “terrible, until compared to everything else.”

    I have no problem respecting a Schaeffer or a Cole, and no doubt they would respect me, and we could all argue like mad, because in the end the bottom line is we actually care about trying to make this place better. And out of all that, we somehow manage to do so.

    Basically, what’s happening is what happened in Germany 1933-45, when the German conservatives discovered (the hard way) the difference between “conservative” and “right wing radical.”

  • Honestly, I think the GOP’s message-or rather, the message they always claim to have, has some merit, misguided though it may be at times.

    Forget about this Admininstration and 9/11 and the past 6 years for just one second. What do the Republicans always claim they represent?

    1: A strong military. Can’t complain about that, as long as we use that strength carefully and thoughtfully.

    2: Smaller government. Well when they’re talking about cutting government waste, I can certainly get behind that. It’s when they re-interpret that message to include cutting necessary federal programs or policies that harm some people who need help in the short term and/or all of us in the long term.

    3: Cutting taxes. See 2.

    4: “Family values.” Now this, to me, is the biggest grey area, because I have no idea if their “family values” reflect my own. All I can do is hope that they will respect my values as much as they expect me to respect theirs.

    On their surface, there’s nothing absolutely horrible about these goals, and they are what attracts so many moderately conservative Americans to vote for the GOP. But now, Republicans have to tacitly acknowledge that today’s Republican leaders represent NONE of these ideals. They’ve weakened the military, stretching them to a breaking point with insufficient armor and vehicles, denying them benefits they were once promised, and sending them back into harm’s way again and again…they can’t claim to be for smaller government anymore. They’ve cut taxes for the very people who don’t need tax cuts, and DURING WARTIME! Bush should be making impassioned pleas to every single 1-percenter in the Billionaire Boys’ Club asking them to sacrifice sacrifice sacrifice for the good of this nation. Instead, he gives them more money we don’t have. And their idea of family values includes not only embracing abstinence-only sex education with a proven history of NOT-working, but now extending it to try to convince anyone unmarried under 30 not to have sex (I assume, after 30, nobody wants the cow so you can give the milk for free).

    Anyone who would still be a Republican in this day and age must have admitted, at least to him or herself, that the GOP is really all about killing brown people, helping rich people, and keeping all the oil for themselves. They might not admit it to the rank-and-file in the party, but that’s how they feel. If you’re not making over 150K a year, and still vote Republican, you live in a state of denial that will only serve to weaken us all. It’s time to recognize that voting Democrat means your religious ideals will be respected and protected, even if they’re not codified into law. It means more people will share in the American dream. It means we can make our military stronger and get them out of harm’s way until our way of life is truly threatened, and we’re not jus told that it is by people who have a financial stake in war. If you’re a good Republican, do yourself a favor, and vote Democrat. It’s like trying exotic food for the first time, you may be amazed at how much you like it.

  • I don’t care anymore what party someone is in. These days, what I care about is what they’re made of.

    A nice illustration of how real Christians differ from raving lickspittles making a 9 letter word into a 4 letter word. As for the gap between obvious reasons to say fuck it and the time people do say fuck it, I assume that if the Democratic party gradually became the abode of arseholes I would go through the same process. Graudual build up of disgust with one event or another making me cry “I’m mad as hell and I’m not gonna take it any more!” (And does Allen realize Foley is one of his?)

    The nice thing is, this is the logical result of constantly running the ShrubCo Dirty Tricks Machine and exactly what ShrubCo doesn’t want to happen. The Divider wants everyone to see the world in Us/Them terms with Them being a bunch of terrorist coddling perverts who want to burn the Bible and make everyone watch the Queer as Folk and The L Word. Thinking people know the world doesn’t work that way and as the GOP keeps pushing the idea to more and greater extremes, it is inevitable that rational people will say “Yech” and wash their hands of the whole stinking lot. As a result Das Base is rapidly dwindling to a collection of mixed nuts, the GOP continues to try to appease their remaining supporters (with many a cry of Traitor! for those who turn against them) and they continue to cultivate people who are too stupid and alarming to do anything but drive more people away.

    Yer doing a heckuva job Karlie!

  • ” I don’t care anymore what party someone is in. These days, what I care about is what they’re made of.”

    In today’s media climate of assination by selective editing, how do we know who candidates really are?
    They must pre-script themselves heavily to protect against an unguarded moment of infamy captured on camera by an opponent.

    The Dean scream, or the Kerry joke get put on endless loop and become the weapon of self-destruction.
    The authentic moment where a candidate reveals his/her real character has become a risk that few are willing to take.

  • Republican’ts cheat. That’s the point. The issue of who controls America is so important that they have to cheat. They cheat in elections and they smear their opponents and on and on.

    So the question kind of is, why is it so important to cheat? Why not be honest about your opponent and honest in the election?

    For the unholy alliance that is the Republican’t party, the answer is different for each segment.

    The Theocratic Reactionaries have to cheat because if they actually laid their policies out for the American People to truly see, America would recoil from the specter of sectarian violence on the model of Iraq that would ensue.

    The Libertarians have to cheat because they have found that most Americans actually want a Government that ensures food safety.

    The Chamber of Commerce Conservatives cheat because nobody really thinks that their being richer means more Americans will have better jobs.

    The Low Tax Conservatives cheat because if Americans knew that only a fraction of estates are ever taxed, they wouldn’t really give a damn about the “Death Tax”.

    The Neo-Cons cheat because it’s really just about Isreal for them.

    The Realists cheat because it’s not about Isreal for them.

    The Texas Mafia cheats because a rationale energy policy would require them to actually work for a living rather than just drill out more oil.

    The Small Government Conservatives cheat because in the end Clinton/Gore did more to control the growth of Government than they could ever do.

    And Republican’t Politicans cheat because they are just inferior beings to the likes of Clinton, Gore, Edwards, Clark, Obama, Rudham-Clinton and especially Murtha.

  • I too am a Republican, and for sometime now, I’ve been at odds with the leadership of my party. I too am disgusted in the win at all costs attitude Mr. Rove and company have brought to the American table.

    These Republican “leaders” need to be seen for what they are – authoritarians who believe themselves omniscent in regard to what is “best for America.” They by no means display on any given day the ability to embrace small “d” democracy. They have, at this juncture, forgotton what it is to be an American first and a partisan second so that the public debate can stay focused on all Americans and not just a select few. Mr. Bush and his cabal (for that is what I believe them to be – Bush, Cheney, Rumsfeld and Baker) are denigrating our beloved country for the profit of their vested oil interests and “proper” socio-economic set.

    Vote the Bastards Out in ’06 and ’08! -Kevo

  • According to Frank Schaeffer, John McCain and Jim Webb are “decent” people whose military service makes them untouchable as far as smear tactics go. So what about John Kerry and John Murtha? Are they not “decent” enough not to have their characters impugned?

    The recent last-minute defections and soul-searching of a now former right-wing blogger and a now former staunchly Republican columnist ring just a tad hollow. After everything that’s been said and done in the last 6 years … no wait I’ll give John Cole and Schaeffer the benefit of the doubt … the last 3 years … and only NOW they’re finally disgusted? That suggests they have a monstrous tolerance for intolerance, deceit, incompetence, corruption, and outright criminal activity a la Mark Foley. Cole’s path to defection may have started earlier. But Schaeffer thought Republicans and their tactics were hunky dory up until this week. And only now do both of them publicly declare they’ve had it.

    What is wrong with these people? Decency? Integrity? Nah, I’m starting to think they’re moral lepers.

  • Yeah, but Schaeffer’s part of the liberal media, so he doesn’t count, right? He’s spent too much time on the Dallas cocktail circuit, which has turned him liberal, right? (What are the others? I forget.)

  • So what ? So these two jackasses finally saw the light ??
    So smearing a war hero tipped the scales, what fricken scales have these two clowns been looking at. Smearing is bad, but their former party has pulled way, way, way, worse. What about smearing McCain, Cleland, Kerry, or Murtha ?

    I mean seriously, a smear campaign was the final straw ? Funny how none of these clowns drew the line at torture or warrant-less searches or secret prisons or secret courts. It was a couple of weeks ago when torture was sanctioned by Bush, and the Webb campaign was the final straw ?? I am not buy whatever they are selling. I know a vote is a vote, but do we really need people like this on our side. I would rather lose then have a bunch of mentally flawed people infiltrated my party and pushing their agenda onto us because they can’t control the fricken monsters they enabled for at least four years.

    We teach our children that having fun is more important then winning, yet here we are taking any slap dick so long as they give us a vote. Politics isn’t fun, but I would rather lose year after year then take aboard people who 6 years ago would have been considered very conservative in order to get a win. That’s why I am a democrat, because we stand for something more then power, we stand for what is right.

  • Scott, I guess I see this less as a story about us getting their votes as it is about them leaving the Rethugs. And more important still, to me it suggests the hopeful possibility that if these two are now willing to go back on very public associations with the Rethugs, there surely are millions of less committed, less engaged, everyday Americans who are quietly and privately reaching the same conclusions. It is understandable to ask with skepticism “why now?” But it is easy to see how nonsensical that slipperly slope can get: i have trouble understanding why there are ANY registered Repubs since, oh, Nixon. But that is an unreasonable expectation. So I just remain glad whenever any of them see the light, whether that took days, weeks, months, years or decades. Whether we want them or not, best if the other side doesn’t have them.

  • I know a vote is a vote, but do we really need people like this on our side.

    I haven’t seen where either Cole or Schaeffer say they are now on “our” side, they are just sick of the GOP. If a bunch of people get sick of the GOP and stay home, that’s one less vote for the ReThug, correct? In fact, Schaeffer writes he is going to register Independent and for all any one knows he might write in Pogo Possum.

    However, speaking of switching, this will not amuse you: http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20061102/pl_nm/usa_elections_kansas_dc

    If this is a cynical move to get votes, screw ’em. If they really have woken up to the fact that the Kansas GOP is dumber than a box of dead rats, they’re more than welcome.

  • From a personal viewpoint, many of us have the right to sneer at latecomers like Cole and Schaeffer. There’s nothing new about Republicans now that we didn’t know two, four, ten, 25 years ago. These guys are just jumping off the bandwagon, so to speak.

    From a political viewpoint, it will be very important how Democrats treat the newcomers. It’s really more a matter of tone than of policies (since we know Americans have long backed Democratic policies by big margins). Will Democrats show a firm commitment to a new kind of politics – reality-based, anti-lobbyist, pro-middle-class, pro-accountability, anti-pork-barrel? Will they approach hot-button issues (abortion, guns) with an attitude of “We have an honest difference here – let’s find common ground while respecting each other’s differences”, or with litmus tests?

    I think there’s a good chance Democrats will be welcoming. The idiotic ACLU/gay-loving/PC/anti-religion stereotype has never been true; leading Democratic politicians are way more moderate than Republicans. But a key factor here will be how the media portrays them, which could be a problem. It will be an interesting process to watch.

  • OK, I get your point guys. You are right. I just hate that something as small as smear ad is what tipped the scales. It just seems so…. republican. I don’t buy it. They are fed up, but I just don’t see life long republicans that have stuck in the game this long pulling any lever but the big ‘R’.

    The thing that really comes as a shock to me is that I have never agreed with conservatives, but now, I would kill to have a descent and honest republican in government. I might even vote for them, not because of their ideology, but just because if the people want that, I can live with it. Give the people the FACTS and if they decide they want conservatives running the show, I can deal with it.

    That is something I would not have said 8 years ago, and it’s so sad that I have been wore down to this point of actually accepting and being fairly happy with a population that wants honest conservatism.

  • I think flight from the Republican party is an indication that today’s party is no longer Republican — and long-time Republicans know it. I read one time that people stay with the same bank unless that bank really screws them over. I’ve been very disappointed and frustrated with the Democratic party from time to time, and have considered leaving it. But the only real alternative was the Republicans.

    I suspect a number of people have quietly voted Republican, holding their noses. I also suspect that in this election, there may some changes of parties in the secrecy of the voting booth.

    I also think it gets down to the “values” issue. “Values” is a misnomer. The word is “principles.” There’s a big difference.

  • Add to your list, the American Conservative magazine:

    http://amconmag.com/2006/2006_11_20/feature.html

    From TFA:

    “There may be little Americans can do to atone for this presidency, which will stain our country’s reputation for a long time. But the process of recovering our good name must begin somewhere, and the logical place is in the voting booth this Nov. 7. If we are fortunate, we can produce a result that is seen—in Washington, in Peoria, and in world capitals from Prague to Kuala Lumpur—as a repudiation of George W. Bush and the war of aggression he launched against Iraq. ”

    Ouch.

  • I think it’s interesting that evidently it’s the attacks on Webb–a former Reagan cabinet official–that are opening eyes with some of these people. I happen to be a big fan of Webb too… but need one have served in a Republican administration to merit decent treatment in politics?

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