By George Neumayr on 2.12.02 @ 12:01AM
Richard Riordan is emerging as the Jim Jeffords of the Pacific Coast -- a stick of dynamite underneath the California Republican Party.
The White House's cynical decision last year to nudge Richard
Riordan into the California gubernatorial race has created more
problems than it solved. Riordan is emerging as the Jim Jeffords of
the Pacific Coast -- a stick of dynamite underneath the California
Republican Party.
Big Tent strategists cast Riordan as the solution to the party's
collapse. But in reality he simply illustrates it -- and seems
determined to shatter what little unity is left in the party.
In San Jose this last weekend at the party's convention, Riordan
thought it wise to humiliate one of the aging icons of California
Republicanism, George Deukmejian, after the former governor said he
couldn't vote for a Republican who has given millions of dollars to
Democrats, including the Duke's opponent Tom Bradley.
"George has a bad memory," said Riordan at the debate with his
opponents Bill Jones and Bill Simon. "The only thing he remembers
are his grudges."
The attempted witticism -- which drew boos from the Republican
audience -- reveals that Riordan isn't simply a poor Republican; he
is a poor candidate, who takes perverse pleasure in sticking his
finger in the eyes of traditional Republicans.
Riordan's self-destructive streak, combined with a penchant for
jaw-dropping gaffes, will make the inevitable Gray Davis-Riordan
matchup amusing at some level for political writers, but it will do
the Republican Party no good. Parties can recover from honorable
defeats; but they don't recover easily from ideological
strokes.
Running a de facto Democrat on the Republican slate injects a
poison of cynicism into the bloodstream of the party, paralyzing
grass-roots enthusiasm. The Davis-Riordan race is an insulting
left-versus-lefter proposition, with Davis even tacking to
Riordan's right on the death penalty. His most recent ad notes
Riordan's lack of "consistency" on the issue, citing a 1987
interview in which Riordan agreed with former California Chief
Justice Rose Bird's "opposition to the death penalty."
"Catholic" Gray Davis also has "Catholic" Riordan playing
defense on the issue of abortion. Riordan, attempting to shore up
his pro-abortion bona fides, has been reduced to the usual Mario
Cuomo-style incoherent babble: "I very strongly dislike abortion.
But I just as strongly respect the right of a woman to make a
choice with respect to her own body."
It is no wonder that the Duke and other high-profile Republicans
are planning to sit out the general election. Michael Schroeder,
John Herrington, and John McGraw -- three former chairmen of the
California Republican Party, all allied to the Simon campaign --
issued a statement last weekend saying they could not vote for
Riordan even in the general election.
"Dick Riordan is no Republican," they said. "Mr. Riordan has
shown a genuine intolerance for Republican candidates and
grass-roots leaders possessing other viewpoints and an unfortunate
interest in his own political career over the interests of his
'fellow' Republicans. We believe these traits make Mr. Riordan
particularly ill-suited to serve as the nominee for our party's top
position, as Mr. Riordan is likely to engage in a selective support
strategy to enhance his own personal motives that will leave many
Republican nominees at every level out in the cold."
How ironic: The White House -- and congressional California
Republicans -- justified their unprincipled courting of Riordan on
the grounds that victory will save the party. Little did they
realize that the price of victory may be the party itself.
George Neumayr is a frequent contributor to the
California Political Review and a recent media fellow at the Hoover
Institution.
topics:
Abortion, NATO