Todayâs G.O.P. has less room for principled conservatives than hateful demagogues.
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[The New York Times](
[The New York Times](
Wednesday, October 25, 2017
[NYTimes.com/Opinion »](
[David Leonhardt]
David Leonhardt
Op-Ed Columnist
This morningâs headlines are about Jeff Flake, but I find myself thinking about Roy Moore. Right now, it seems that the Republican Party has room for Moore but not Flake.
Flake, of course, is the Republican senator and Trump critic who announced yesterday that he wouldnât run for re-election, because he thought that winning would require giving in to Trumpism. âIt is time for our complicity and our accommodation of the unacceptable to end,â he said on the Senate floor.
Moore is the former judge who recently won the Republican nomination for a Senate seat in Alabama. He is also a demagogue who has called homosexuality âevilâ and âso heinousâ and who engaged in a discussion, [on video]( about whether it should be âpunished by death.â
After Flakeâs speech, his Senate colleagues applauded and honored him. But applause is easy. The more important question is: What are those same senators doing about Moore â a man who, unlike President Trump, can still be prevented from taking high office?
They are endorsing him, thatâs what.
Mike Lee of Utah has praised Mooreâs âtested reputation of integrity.â Rand Paul of Kentucky has lauded Moore for âdefending and standing up for the Constitution.â Ted Cruz, just a couple of hours before Flakeâs speech, released a full-throated endorsement of Moore that celebrated his âlifelong passion for the Constitution and the Bill of Rights.â
Yes, you heard that correctly: They are praising the integrity and Constitutional commitment of a man [who refused to take a stand]( against whether gay and lesbian Americans should be executed.
Moore was also removed from the Alabama Supreme Court for violating judicial ethics. He has said that Muslims should not be allowed in Congress and suggested that 9/11 was the result of this countryâs godlessness. (If you want to read the full comments yourself, you can do so via [CNN]( [Time]( and [The Hill](
So far, only one Republican senator has spoken out against Moore, [according to Politico](. His name is Jeff Flake. âWhen we disagree with something so fundamental,â [he said last month]( âwe ought to stand up and say, âThatâs not right, thatâs not our party, that is not us.ââ
I leave you with a longer excerpt from [Flakeâs prepared remarks]( yesterday than youâre likely to find in most news stories:
âActing on conscience and principle is the manner in which we express our moral selves, and as such, loyalty to conscience and principle should supersede loyalty to any man or party. We can all be forgiven for failing in that measure from time to time. I certainly put myself at the top of the list of those who fall short in that regard. I am holier-than-none.
âBut too often, we rush not to salvage principle but to forgive and excuse our failures so that we might accommodate them and go right on failing â until the accommodation itself becomes our principle.
âIn that way and over time, we can justify almost any behavior and sacrifice almost any principle. Iâm afraid that this is where we now find ourselves.â
How It Played in Trumpworld. âNot one critical word by Flake of the Demsâ obstructionism, biased press. Speech could have been delivered by Obama or Pelosi,â [charged]( Laura Ingraham, the right-wing commentator. âHad Hillary won, heâd be happy today,â she tweeted.
On his show, Sean Hannity [decried]( the âsnowflake, whinyâ Flake as part of the âpathetic, weak, gutless, spineless, never-Trumper establishment Republican forces, all lashing out against the president.â G.O.P. senators who have criticized or broken with Trump are âstanding in the way of enacting an agenda to help move the country forward, what the people voted for last November, and theyâre trying to be martyrs in the process,â Hannity said.
Breitbartâs home page blared a three-word, flashing headline yesterday: âWinning: Flake Out.â Charlie Spiering, Breitbartâs White House correspondent, [tweeted]( âMcConnellâs team now 0-3 #LosersGoHome,â referring to the demise of Flake and two other establishment Republican senators, Bob Corker of Tennessee and Luther Strange of Alabama. Strange lost a primary to none other than Roy Moore.
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