Republican contenders fighting battles lost long ago

OPINION : Party candidates for the presidential nomination are trying to be most radical and unreasonable

OPINION: Party candidates for the presidential nomination are trying to be most radical and unreasonable

IT’S FINALLY sinking in.

Republicans are getting queasy at the gruesome sight of their party eating itself alive, savaging the brand in ways that will long resonate.

“Republicans being against sex is not good,” GOP strategist Alex Castellanos told me mournfully. “Sex is popular.” He said his party is “coming to grips with a weaker field than we’d all want”, and going through the five stages of grief. “We’re at No 4,” he said. (Depression.) “We’ve still got one to go.” (Acceptance.)

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The contenders in the Hester Prynne primaries are tripping over one another trying to be the most radical, unreasonable and insane candidate they can be. They pounce on any traces of sanity in the other candidates – be it humanity toward women, compassion toward immigrants or willingness to make the rich pay a nickel more in taxes – and try to destroy them with it.

President Barack Obama has deranged conservatives, just as George W Bush had deranged liberals. The right’s image of Obama, though, is more a figment of its imagination than the left’s image of W was.

Newt Gingrich, a war wimp in Vietnam who supported W’s trumped-up invasion of Iraq, had the gall to tell a crowd that defeating Obama – “the most dangerous president in modern American history” – was “a duty of national security” because “he is incapable of defending the United States” and because he “wants to unilaterally weaken the United States”.

Who killed Osama again? How can the warm, nurturing Catholic Church of my youth now be represented in the public arena by uncharitable nasties like Gingrich and Rick Santorum? “It makes the party look like it isn’t a modern party,” Rudy Giuliani told CNN’s Erin Burnett, fretting about the candidates’ Cotton Mather attitudes on women and gays. “It doesn’t understand the modern world that we live in.”

Alan Simpson, the former Republican senator from Wyoming, called Santorum “rigid and homophobic”. Arlen Specter, who quit the Republicans to become a Democrat three years ago before Pennsylvania voters sent him home from the Senate, told MSNBC: “Where you have Sen Santorum’s views, so far to the right, with his attitude on women in the workplace and gays and the bestiality comments and birth control, I do not think it is realistic for Rick Santorum to represent America.” This from the man who accused Anita Hill of perjury.

Republicans are panicking at the thought of going down the drain with a loser, missing their chance at capturing the Senate and giving back all those House seats won in 2010. They yearn for a fresh candidate, including Jeb Bush, who after all has experience at shoplifting presidential victories at the last minute.

Their jitters increased exponentially as they watched Mitt belly-flop in his hometown on Friday, giving a dreadful rehash of his economic ideas, babbling again about the “right height” of Michigan trees and blurting out that Ann “drives a couple of Cadillacs”. Romney’s Richie Rich slips underscore what Ed Rollins, a Republican strategist, told the Ripon Forum: “If we are only the party of Wall Street and country clubbers, we will quickly become irrelevant.”

Santorum, whose name aptly comes from the same Latin root as sanctimonious, went on Glenn Beck’s web-based show with his family and offered this lunacy: “I understand why Barack Obama wants to send every kid to college,” because colleges are “indoctrination mills” that “harm” the country. He evidently wants home university schooling, which will cut down on keggers.

His wife, Karen, suggested her husband’s success is “God’s will” and that he wants “to make the culture a better culture, more pleasing to God”. The barking-mad Republicans of Virginia are helping to make the party look foolish and creepy.

A video went viral on Friday in which delegate Dave Albo comically regaled his fellow lawmakers in the Statehouse with his own Old Dominion version of Lysistrata: he suggested he was denied sex with his wife because of a Republican-sponsored Bill that would have made ultrasounds, often with a vaginal probe, mandatory for women seeking abortions.

With music, red wine and a big-screen TV, he made a move on his wife, Rita, while she watched a news report about the Bill. "And she looks at me and goes, 'I've got to go to bed'," Albo said as his colleagues guffawed. Republicans, with their crazed Reagan fixation, are a last-gasp party, living posthumously, fighting battles on sex, race and immigration long ago won by the other side. They're trying to roll back the clock, but time is passing them by. – ( New York Timesservice)

Maureen Dowd

Maureen Dowd

Maureen Dowd is a columnist with the New York Times