Republicans vs. Republicans

USA Today’s Susan Page had a fascinating, must-read item yesterday, primarily about an initiative called the “Ohio Restoration Project,” which is a network of extremely conservative, vaguely theocratic, right-wing “Patriot Pastors” who hope to take over the state politically.

Pastor Russell Johnson paces across the broad stage as he decries the “secular jihadists” who have “hijacked” America, accuses the public schools of neglecting to teach that Hitler was “an avid evolutionist” and links abortion to children who murder their parents.

“It’s time for the church to get a spinal column” and push the “seculars and the jihadists … into the dust bin of history,” the guest preacher tells a congregation that fills the sanctuary at First Christian Church of Canton.

Johnson and others who lead this Ohio Restoration Project believe they have the numbers to dominate not only the state’s GOP, but all state elections. They’re rallying behind Ohio Secretary of State J. Kenneth Blackwell (R), who plans to lead them in “reclaiming” the state.

Not every Republican in Ohio, however, is on board with the plan.

Neil Clark, a former chief operating officer for the Ohio Senate Republican Caucus and one of the best-connected lobbyists in Columbus, the state capital, says he and other moderate Republicans are worried about the state “going back to the Stone Ages of Salem.”

They are ready to fight back, he says. “That could be in recruiting another candidate, or it could be in saying we’re not going to support a candidate that doesn’t have interests other than the three fundamental interests of the church — abortion, gay marriage and gambling,” he says. “There’s a lot of other things that make a state go.”

This is a division that could make the DLC vs. liberal Dems look like a tea party.

As Digby explained very well yesterday, we are “beginning to see some big tensions building around the radical religious right and its symbiotic relationship with the Republican Party.”

I think there is a good possibility that this is going to be played out all over the country in the next few years. This 50/50 electorate is not confined to Ohio. And despite the RNC’s attempts to demonize Move-On as the modern Weathermen, the face of radicalism today is not Democrats who were opposed to the war in Iraq — the Republicans themselves are trying to distance themselves as fast as they can from that debacle. (Perhaps the DLC could take notice and stop flogging the GWOT, too. It’s been officially decreed as last year’s color.) No, the face of radicalism is guys like this pastor who are insisting that abortion is like kids murdering their parents and saying that the “secular jihad” should be pushed into the dustbin of history. Moderate republicans are getting nervous about this crap at long last.

Unsurprisingly, Paul Weyrich is quoted in that article saying that “Ken Blackwell ‘believes God wanted him as secretary of State during 2004’ because as such he was responsible for voting operations in a critical state during a critical election.” Weyrich added: “It is difficult to disagree with that proposition.” Paul Weyrich obviously has a sense of humor. He, along with a cadre of movement conservatives (that includes our boy Karl Rove) have been building an evangelical political machine for more than two decades. It’s the red state version of Tammany Hall. “God” placing Ken Blackwell in charge of counting the votes is one of his proudest achievements.

It is, therefore, in our best interest to separate these people from the rest of the Republican party. I certainly do not believe it’s impossible.

I don’t either. The fact that an enormous number of self-described independents have abandoned Bush and are uncomfortable with today’s GOP tells us a great deal about the public’s anxiety about the Republicans’ direction.

So, what are the wedges that will divide the party? Paul Hackett said during his campaign, “I don’t need Washington to tell me how to live my personal life, or how to pray to my God.” Like Digby, that sounds to me like a good place to start.

Sounds similar to the Christian Exodus in South Carolina.

http://bulldogpolitics.blogspot.com/2005/08/struggle-against-ideological_04.html

  • I’m just up the road from the now famous OH-02 district. While Ohio is slowly turning into a southern rather than a midwestern state, it’s not there yet. Ohio tends to elect wishy washy moderates (relatively speaking) like Taft. While Taft is an inept crook, he’s not a fundy wingnut. There really is a chance the fundies could overplay their hand and start pissing off more traditional polite live-and-let-live midwest types. This, plus a rotten economy, plus scandal, plus Iraq (a lot of ohioans dying over there) means the dems have a decent chance. If they don’t blow it again. Like I said, find more Hacketts. That’s how you win states like Ohio. Hope he runs for senate or maybe gov by the way.

  • You know, if the Dems were smart they’d be taking nuts like this and interweaving them in the public mind with guys like Bush and Frist and Delay, who are all too happy to hang out with this same crowd. Dems would paint the Republican Party AS Christian Jihadists, and use actual footage of crazy talk like this to make that linkage well before the next election.

    As for how the Deaniacs are still helping us all, this is priceless:

    “It’s time for the church to get a spinal column….”

  • Aha!

    This alliance between the GOP and the religious right is a discordant one & now they are falling to fighting over the scraps. The rich Republicans aren’t going to give the religious right the *real* power that they seek, and maybe they are waking up to that fact. This civil war should be fun to watch. Of course, whoever wins is still a loser.

  • I know Neil Clark from a previous life, and he was/is, at least in my mind, associated with “moderate” republicans like Voinovich, State Senator Stan Aronoff, and State Senator Dick Finan. Neil was, as I recall, involved in Betty Montgomery’s initial foray into elected politics. I guess what I am trying to say is that Neil Clark isn’t some far-right wingnut and if he is talking about a fissure in republican ranks in Ohio, its a real fissure. For the sake of Ohio, I hope it is true.

  • I’m thinking Ohio is a bit of a bellweather on this issue. I think the GOP is going to have a day of reckoning between the christianists and the pro-business GOP. Sort of like what happened post-Reagan in the Democratic party. Both play(ed) to the respective squeaky wheels at least in public and found it increasinly hard to manage competing interests behind the scenes. The Dems lost the south becase those yellow- dog Dems bailed for the GOP.

    Certain segments (the middle usually) have to pick which party they agree more with and learn to live with the rest. The rest is increasingly loud and obnoxious – to the point that it is hard/impossible to live with.

    I have no sympathy for them (any more than I had to the Dems). They bring/brought it on themselves.

  • Actually, Hitler was into eugenics, NOT evolution. Which, come to think of it, is also a pseudoscience like Creationism (oops, I mean “Intelligent Design”).

  • Actually, Hitler had to eat, drink, breathe and go
    to the bathroom. Pretty shoots down the whole
    human race, doesn’t it? Hell, the entire animal
    kingdom.

    Psst: Hitler liked dogs, too. That’s gotta really
    kill those angry white men.

  • A couple of things…

    First:

    What happens to the bright pesky high school kid who writes a paper arguing that Hitler was a Christian? Does he get his balls cut off? And if so, can he become a tranny AND get married?

    Second:

    Re ET: I think the GOP is going to have a day of reckoning between the christianists and the pro-business GOP.

    Ain’t it the truth. There has always been a stink bomb lying mute between these two.

    To wit: In business sex sells and the fundies have always hated sex for fun.

    And of course, even deeper, science drives technology which drives business. The war on science being waged by the Christian taliban is actually a war a business.

    I’ve been predicting this sick marriage couldn’t last. And it won’t.

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