December 10, 2007
The Mitt-Mike Religious War
By
Patrick J. Buchanan
Four weeks before New Hampshire and three weeks before
the Iowa caucuses, the Republican race has become a
proxy religious war.
On one side is a Baptist preacher who called
homosexuality
"an aberrant, unnatural and sinful lifestyle"
that "can pose a dangerous public health risk,"
urged the isolation of AIDS sufferers, and
declared in 1998 that we must "answer the alarm
clock and take this nation back for Christ."
On the other is a devout Mormon whose
finest hour was
last week's televised address in which he refused to
back away from any precept of his faith, but affirmed:
"Jesus Christ is the Son of God and the Savior of
mankind."
Yet, the Baptist preacher has implied that Mormonism may
be a cult and is running as the
Christian conservative, i.e., God's, candidate.
This is not the wonkish stuff of which so much politics
is now made. This is high-voltage, and
faith and morality are likely to be major issues in
political debate in the weeks between now and the first
engagements of 2008.
The Baptist preacher, ex-Gov. Mike Huckabee, has taken a
sudden and strong lead in Iowa, with ex-Gov. Mitt Romney
the only man who can stop him there. And what Huckabee
has said about the
homosexual lifestyle is less likely to hurt him with
caucus-goers than to
solidify his support as a Godly man. Moreover, he is
surging nationally, as the former front-runners—McCain,
Rudy and Thompson—slowly fade.
Indeed, with the Mitt-Mike religious war on the
Republican side and the
Bill-and-Hillary vs.
Obama-Oprah celebrity battle on the Democratic side,
it is hard to see how other candidates can attract the
media before
Christmas, New Year's and the
bowl games. Then, Iowa and New Hampshire are
suddenly upon us. How, for example, does John Edwards
attract attention, let alone Biden, Dodd, Richardson and
Kucinich?
The folly of Rudy, McCain and Thompson dissing the
Iowans by taking a walk on the straw poll in August is
apparent. While Romney won comfortably, Huckabee was the
real winner. By running a surprising and strong second,
he drove his rival for the Christian vote,
Sam Brownback, out of the race and became a favorite
of the national media. Given the opening and
opportunity, he did the rest himself.
Using moral and social issues that appeal to the
Christian right, and an economic populism that appeals
to working folks left out of the market run-up and left
behind, Huckabee has run a fine race and could break
away, as may be seen by the hailstorm he is undergoing.
As he says, no hunter shoots at a dead animal.
The questions now are whether Huckabee has peaked,
whether he can be stopped, and, if so, who stops him?
Today, the one man who can do that is Romney. If Romney
wins Iowa, not only would that break Huckabee's
momentum, but Romney would likely surge to victory in
New Hampshire, five days later, where he leads, and in
Michigan, a week after, where his
father was governor and
Romney is a famous name. Comes then South Carolina.
If Mitt is 3-0 going into South Carolina and everyone
else is 0 for 3, it is hard to see who beats him there.
If Romney loses Iowa, however, he has to win New
Hampshire or he is done. But if Huckabee wins Iowa, he
need not win New Hampshire for he has already moved into
the lead in South Carolina.
The question for the other Republicans is the same:
Where do you win? And if you don't win early, do you
have the resources to go on?
John McCain, the
candidate of the Union-Leader, either wins
New Hampshire or goes home. For he is going to be
humiliated in Iowa if he does not drop out. And if he
cannot win the Granite State,
his strongest in 2000, how does he raise the money
to carry on, and where does he win?
Fred Thompson appears to have little chance to win any
of the first three. He is banking on holding on until
South Carolina, despite a probable three straight losses
before then and no publicity to rival what Huckabee and
Romney are getting right now. Fred may not make it to
South Carolina.
Which brings us to Rudy, the front-runner. His hope:
That Huckabee wins Iowa, McCain wins New Hampshire,
Romney wins Michigan, and Thompson or McCain wins South
Carolina. Then, after four defeats, he comes roaring
back in Florida, grabs the headlines going into Feb. 5,
when half the primaries are held, and marches forward to
the nomination.
Whoever thought up this strategy is the kind of guy who
plays Russian roulette with four bullets in the chamber.
The peril of the Rudy strategy is if a Romney, a
Huckabee or a McCain wins in New Hampshire and South
Carolina and catches a fire no attack ad can put out.
Already, Rudy's national lead is vanishing. How he
maintains it through December and four straight January
losses is, as they say, problematic.
Patrick J. Buchanan
needs
no introduction
to VDARE.COM readers; his book
State of Emergency: The Third World Invasion and
Conquest of America,
can be ordered from Amazon.com. His new book
is
Day of Reckoning: How
Hubris, Ideology, and Greed Are Tearing America Apart.