Bill Kristol made a comment on Fox News the other day that foreshadows what may eventually drive the GOP presidential primaries.
“I think [the personal lives of Republican presidential candidates are] not a big problem,” Kristol said. “Generally speaking, the American people discount private lives quite rigorously, actually, and they try to pick someone who will be a good president and they separate public and private to a pretty great degree.”
Newt Gingrich recently said the same thing. Personal issues? In a presidential campaign? How wildly inappropriate.
Former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee (R), a presidential hopeful, seems to have the inevitable response to all of this.
A Baptist minister, Mr. Huckabee expressed impatience with the political choices so far of some religious conservatives. In the March Wall Street Journal/NBC News poll, Mr. Giuliani led among Republicans with 38%; even among evangelical voters, the twice-divorced former New York City mayor, a supporter of abortion rights, received 37% to 2% for Mr. Huckabee.
“If Republicans in this election vote in such a way as to say a candidate’s personal life and personal conduct in office doesn’t matter,” he declared, “then a lot of Christian evangelical leaders owe Bill Clinton a public apology.”
Expect to hear quite a bit more of this over the next couple of months.
The American Prospect’s Sam Rosenfeld noted yesterday that we shouldn’t forget that the “Republicans haven’t really started attacking each other yet.”
We’re of course nowhere near the time of the cycle that, two elections ago, Team Bush went loco on John McCain in South Carolina, but well before that there are presumably going to be some elbows thrown and charges lobbed at one another. I state the obvious merely to underscore that the feasibility of the party’s front-runners consisting of a very recently pro-choice Mormon, a pro-choice, gay-friendly, pro-immigration, anti-gun two-time divorcee, and an elderly, sick, very recently near-Democrat has yet to be put to the test by an actual, aggressive, knock-down campaign of any sort.
So true, so true. It’s a point I tried to emphasize in a Washington Monthly piece last year.
Right now, at least 10 high-profile Republicans are eyeing the race. If a candidate with an adulterous past pulls ahead, the stragglers may be sorely tempted to play the infidelity card — if not openly, then through their surrogates. In 2000, George W. Bush’s allies went well beyond raising McCain’s affair — they spread bogus rumors in advance of the South Carolina primary that the senator had fathered an illegitimate black child. This strategy helped to deliver Bush a key primary victory and, arguably, the nomination.
There are going to be some second- and third-tier Republican candidates who are desperate to get ahead, and narrow the gap. They know, contrary to Kristol’s comments, that conservative voters — you know, the ones who vote in GOP primaries — care quite a bit about these issues.
It’s going to get ugly. Evangelical apologies for Clinton remain highly unlikely.