« Midweek Poll Update | Home | CRNC Convention: An anti-war blogger’s perspective »
Giuliani a “Nixon Republican”
By rawhide | July 18, 2007
So says Michael Gerson, President Bush’s former speechwriter. In a column in the Washington Post, Gerson writes:
By this standard, Giuliani is a Nixon Republican. He is perhaps the most publicly secular major candidate of either party — his conflicts with Roman Catholic teaching make him more reticent on religion than either Hillary Clinton or Barack Obama. But as a prosecutor and mayor of New York, he won conservative respect for making all the right enemies: the ACLU, advocates of blasphemous art, purveyors of racial politics, Islamist mass murderers, mob bosses and the New York Times editorial page…
But the Nixon example is also a warning. His presidency — from wage and price controls to the nomination of Justice Harry Blackmun– could hardly be called a conservative success story. As president, Nixon was a talented man without an ideological compass, mainly concerned with the accumulation of power. Giuliani’s 1994 endorsement of New York Gov. Mario Cuomo — the modern hero of Democratic liberalism — also indicates some loose ideological moorings. And, as with Nixon, Giuliani’s combativeness, on occasion, blurs into pettiness.
Another consequence of a Giuliani victory would be to place the Republican nominee in direct conflict with the Roman Catholic Church. For someone who aspires to be the fourth Roman Catholic to lead a major-party ticket, this is not a minor thing.
Giuliani is not only pro-choice. He has supported embryonic stem cell research and public funding for abortion. He supports the death penalty. He supports “waterboarding” of terror suspects and seems convinced that the conduct of the war on terrorism has been too constrained. Individually, these issues are debatable. Taken together, they are the exact opposite of Catholic teaching, which calls for a “consistent ethic of life” rather than its consistent devaluation. No one inspired by the social priorities of Pope John Paul II can be encouraged by the political views of Rudy Giuliani. Church officials who criticized John Kerry on abortion are anxious for the opportunity to demonstrate their bipartisanship by going after a Republican. Those attacks on Giuliani have already begun.
Then again, Giuliani could be the “Reagan Republican” that he is claiming to be.
Topics: Presidential Primary, Campaign 2008, Republican Presidential contenders, Rudy Giuliani |
