Future Conservative Leadership
It is
incredible but George W. Bush has not even been sworn in for his
second term as president and the political chattering in Washington
has already switched to 2008.
Senate
Majority Leader Bill Frist made the opening move. He was the first
prominent Republican to publicly express reservations about Arlen
Specter becoming chairman of the Judiciary Committee after the later
questioned whether a nominee who supported overturning Roe v. Wade
could be confirmed for the Supreme Court. Every head inside the
Beltway turned and asked, why would the normally reserved Leader get
so far out front against a fellow member of the club, one whose vote
he would have to seek out in a closely-divided Senate?
The
astonishment was compounded when Frist quietly added a "conscience
clause" in the Omnibus Spending Bill to allow doctors and medical
personnel to refuse to participate in abortions if they had moral
objections to the procedure, overturning existing policy. Clearly,
the insiders reasoned, the Leader had read the election returns and
realized that his ambitions to become president lay in winning the
support of the moral right that was so critical to the GOP's 2004
victory.
Almost as quickly, Sen. George Allen was touting
his success as head of the National Republican Senatorial Committee
in gaining a net of four new seats in the upper house, which his
news release labeled "historic." The blitz began with promotions by
the NRSC staff and ended with a prominent puff piece in the town's
preeminent conservative billboard, The Washington Times. Then,
everyone jumped in with various political handicappers mentioning
former New York mayor Rudy Giuliani and governor George Pataki,
Senators John McCain, Chuck Hagel, Rick Santorum, and governors Mit
Romney of Massachusetts, Jeb Bush of Florida, Bill Owens of Colorado
and Mark Sanford of South Carolina. Giuliani and McCain were far out
in front of the GOP field in the polls, as was Hillary Clinton for
the Democrats.
It is,
of course, very early to handicap the race but top expert Charles
Cook suggested that the polls do mean something, even this far out.
He noted that this will be the first time since 1928 when no
incumbent president or vice president will be on the ballot and so
the race will be especially wide open. Although he conceded it was
hard to see how a pro-abortion, pro-gay, anti-gun Easterner could
win the Republican nomination, he correctly emphasized that Giuliani
is a "rock star" who could draw interest even in the South and
overcome the odds. It is difficult to see how moderates like Pataki
(especially from his own state) and Romney could breathe in the same
space. McCain has run before and must be considered an exception,
one who could compete with the former mayor. If he does, his friend
Hagel probably would not run but if McCain does not get into the
race the Nebraskan could become his effective surrogate.
Frist,
another moderate, who has been the conservatives' bet noir at the
last two convention platform hearings enforcing GOP centrism on
reluctant rightist delegates, is another matter. As leader, he can
do favors for social conservatives during the next four years as his
two recent moves prove. While opponents will note that he ultimately
supported Specter, he did remove a very objectionable limit on
personal freedom, appealing to both evangelicals and Catholics. More
important, he is close to President Bush and is rumored to be the
Bush personal and organizational favorite for 2008. This would give
him a preeminent fundraising advantage operating from the top
government position under only the president himself.
On the conservative side, Sen.
Santorum has definitely hurt himself for his support of Specter not
only for the chairmanship but, more critically, in Specter's primary
against conservative favorite, Rep. Pat Toomey. Indeed, many
conservatives complain that his support was key to Toomey's loss
since President Bush could not have also supported Specter if
Santorum had not done so first. In any event, Santorum probably will
not run for president, reportedly preferring Frist's Majority Leader
job when he moves up to president. Gov. Jeb Bush has repeatedly said
he will not run in 2008, a position confirmed by no less than his
mother, Barbara.
Gov.
Bill Owens had been the conservative favorite because of his
long-time association with conservative causes and his strong record
as governor, a position historically much stronger in competing for
president than senator. Yet, Owens' support for businessman Peter
Coors against conservative stalwart Rep. Bob Schaffer angered many
on the right, who thought the more substantive Congressman was not
only more sound ideologically but could have won in November as a
more convincing candidate. The Colorado governor has also been
involved in a messy separation from his wife of many years, and she
has all of the sympathy in the matter both in the state and
nationwide. One major national conservative analyst who is very
close to Owens believes this will disqualify him from seeking the
presidency.
That
leaves Sen. Allen and Gov. Sanford as the most likely conservative
champions. Allen's best claim is his previous record as governor of
Virginia. He exudes charm and folksiness and would be very appealing
to middle America. His profile in the Senate has been low except for
the insider NRSC role and his lifetime voting record is only three
points higher than Frist's. His gubernatorial record, however, gives
him not only the executive experience most of the right desire but
demonstrates solid conservative accomplishments on taxes, spending
and the environment. We have called Sanford the most conservative
governor in America (http://acuf.org/issues/issue15/040703news.asp)
and his record in the House was impeccable. He is the smartest one
around, although he does not advertise it, and he is immoveable on
principle. The only problem is that he is up for re-election in 2006
and he has the good sense not to want to think about the presidency
at all this early in the game.
Of
course, 2008 is a long way off and somehow the country must survive
until then. The sixth year of a presidential term is always
difficult for the incumbent party in Congressional elections and
that is only two years away. President Bush has already taken steps
in the Omnibus Spending Bill to begin reducing the rate of increase
in domestic spending and promises to reform entitlements, stabilize
the dollar and deal with the trade deficit. He is also keeping on
schedule to hold elections in Iraq, on December 2 specifically
linking the elections to bringing American troops home. These are
proposals of enormous magnitude and will require more courageous
support in Congress than the GOP has been willing to demonstrate
during the president's first term.
Fortunately, Tom Coburn (OK) and Jim
DeMint (SC) have been newly elected to the Senate, after earlier
service in the House. As we argued before the election, only a few
committed legislators can make a big difference in the Senate, where
the rules favor individualists, and these two go-getters can finally
fill the hole left when Jesse Helms and Phil Gramm retired. Together
with Lindsey Graham (SC), John Sununu (NH), John Ensign (NV), Trent
Lott (MS), and Judd Gregg (NH) -- all of whom also had the courage
to oppose the flawed and spendthrift prescription drug bill in the
last Congress -- there just might be the beginnings of an effective
conservative Senate caucus.
Readers
of ConservativeBattleline.com are aware that Mike Pence (IN), Jeff
Flake (AZ), and Marilyn Musgrave (CO) have led efforts to make the
Republican Study Committee caucus in the House more effective for
conservative principles. They are backed by the other members who
had the courage to stand up to the strong-arm tactics of the GOP
leadership and can be counted on for conservative leadership in the
next Congress including Todd Akin (MO), J. Gresham Barrett (SC), Dan
Burton (IN), Steve Chabot (OH), John Culberson (TX, Jo Ann Emerson
(MO), Tom Feeney (FL), Scott Garrett (NJ), Gil Gutknecht (MN), John
Hostettler (IN), Walter Jones (NC), Jeff Miller (FL), Jerry Moran
(KS), Ron Paul (TX), Jim Ryun (KS), John Shadegg, (AZ), Tom Tancredo
(CO), and Zach Wamp (TN). They expect to be joined by newly elected
members and even some current ones who have since had buyers remorse
for supporting the budget-busting drug bill.
There is also good news regarding
their former House colleague in the battle to hold down entitlement
spending, Pat Toomey. Speculation is high in the state that he will
run for governor of Pennsylvania. Kenneth Blackwell, the solid
conservative secretary of state in Ohio, is also aiming at his
state's governorship. In other words, there are many conservatives
who are in office in positions of potential leadership. But outside
conservatives must support and encourage them and help them increase
their ranks.
If
conservatives need motivation, consider that Hillary Clinton leads
the Democrats for 2008. Frankly, a relatively conservative Democrat
like Senator (and former governor) Evan Bayh of Indiana or Gov. Mark
Warner of Virginia would be more difficult to defeat in the general
election but the mere possibility of her victory should inspire
anyone on the right. She has handled herself cleverly as Senator and
will be a formidable candidate. She has the advantage that she can
move quite far right on policy without alienating her base and so
successfully appeal to the middle, especially if the dollar
continues to weaken and U.S. troops are still dying in
Iraq.
If President Bush has reformed
entitlements to stabilize the economy and limited the number of
American military casualties, a moderate in his mold such as Sen.
Frist would have a good chance for the Republican nomination to face
Sen. Clinton. But it is likely independent voters will be looking
for something new under these circumstances, making her the
favorite. If things seem to require a firm hand on terrorism at the
time, however, Mayor Giuliani would probably be able to overcome
Frist for the nomination, even with his liberal social record. If
candidate Bush was able to change the party on education and
spending, why could not a more charismatic mayor do the same on
social issues? Yet, this would have social conservatives sit out the
election or support a third party (under, for example, Pat Buchanan)
making Sen. Clinton, again, the favorite.
Can a
consistent conservative be nominated and elected in 2008? A
conservative would have the best chance for the presidency
paradoxically if Republicans fritter away their mandate the next
four years and the country woke to the fact that the date for the
entitlement explosion would then only be eight years away. The
former will be decided by what President Bush and the GOP leadership
do and the degree of intransigence on the part of the Democratic
opposition; the later is in the hands of conservatives themselves. A
serious conservative candidate willing to confront the real problems
facing America could be elected in 2008 but it would take a great
deal of work on the part of the conservative movement that has to
have started yesterday. It would be a long shot against high odds
but conservatives could do it.
If a
Bill, Rudy and Hillary trifecta is not enough to inspire
conservatives to action, nothing can.
Donald Devine, Editor.
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