By George Neumayr on 2.26.02 @ 12:02AM
He is if Bill Simon has anything to say. Besides, Riordan has already said all the wrong things. Why should Republicans vote for a man who wants nothing to do with them?
The gap between Richard Riordan and Bill Simon in the California
Republican gubernatorial primary is closing.
Riordan's campaign is sputtering after weeks of gaffes and
gratuitous attacks on Republican values. Gray Davis's anti-Riordan
ads aren't helping either. They portray Riordan as, among other
things, a flip-flopping pansy on the death penalty. Yes, that's
correct: the Golden State's leftist governor is attacking the
apparent GOP standard-bearer from the right.
Meanwhile, Bill Simon's campaign, after an astonishingly long
period of dormancy, is showing some signs of strength. He is
drawing attention to Riordan's appalling record as a Republican and
pledging never to raise taxes (Riordan once said taxes in the state
were too low).
Unfortunately, Simon may lose some critical votes to the other
member of the race, California Secretary of State Bill Jones, who
spent months attacking Riordan while Simon curiously stayed on the
sidelines.
Jones qualifies as the Bob Dole of the California Republican
Party. His campaign slogan might as well be: "Vote for me, I am a
loyal party hack."
To unite the conservative base around him, Simon would have done
well early on to portray both Riordan and Jones as out-of-touch
Republicans. Jones, after all, helped Pete Wilson pass one of the
largest state tax increases in American history.
But who knows, perhaps Simon still has time to tell California
conservatives not to waste their votes on this center-right
Wilsonite, whose fundraising potential against Davis is nil.
Riordan is clearly more worried about Simon. Riordan, before
considering a gubernatorial campaign himself, urged Simon, a
neighbor in tony West Los Angeles, to run for governor. But now
with Simon's numbers improving, Riordan is smearing him. In a cheap
shot even for a politician, Riordan is blaming Simon for the
failure of a Savings and Loan that Simon's late father owned.
Riordan's attack ad makes sinister mention of the "Simon-led" bank
-- never mind that the Simon here in question is dead.
"I felt people should know what kind of person he is," says
Riordan pathetically of his challenger.
What kind of person is Riordan? Simon has enough advertising
dough to solidify in primary voters' minds the image of Riordan as
the Jim Jeffords of California -- an erratic independent who will
tolerate everything except principled Republicanism.
Riordan makes a great deal of noise about the importance of
"smart" and "inclusive" GOP politics. But he seems incapable of
practicing it in a primary. Telling primary voters that their party
is intrinsically misogynist and racist -- which is the upshot of
his pro-abortion, pro-affirmative action remarks -- is not exactly
a prudent primary strategy.
Riordan has an almost obsessive need to provoke and humiliate
traditional Republicans. Hence his pointless pot shot at former GOP
governor George Deukmejian -- "He only remembers his grudges."
Riordan's response to Gray Davis's preemptive strikes has been
equally dumb. A hyper Davis has rolled out ads casting Riordan,
inexplicably enough, as a pro-lifer (due to Riordan's once letting
the truth about abortion as "murder" slip out many years ago).
Had Riordan played his cards right, he might have let these ads
confuse Republican primary voters into thinking he is a socially
conservative Catholic. Instead, he is defensively hollering from
the rooftops his devotion to the abortion cause. Only
"pro-choicers," Riordan monomaniacally asserts, can win in
California. Has it ever occurred to Riordan that the tens of
thousands of Latino voters in the state don't find his
wine-and-cheese Brentwood pro-abortion politics terribly
appealing?
It's worth noting, by the way, the sorry spectacle of two
Catholics -- Davis and Riordan -- tussling over who's more
pro-abortion. Davis takes communion at Bad Shepherd parish in
Beverly Hills, while the thrice-married Riordan boasts of
membership at St. Monica's in Santa Monica and is actually trying
to use that status to silence the pro-life Simon. ("You and I
belong to the same church…you have to be ashamed at the
folklore that came out of your mouth," he said to him in a debate
when Simon noted truthfully Riordan's record.)
Naturally, the politically correct bishops of California have
not rebuked these two sons of the Church. Apparently they are too
busy resolving sex-abuse suits to issue a reprimand. (Los Angeles
Cardinal Roger Mahony, a Caesar Chavez leftist who offered an
opening prayer at the 2000 Democratic National Convention, used to
fly himself around ludicrously in a helicopter Riordan financed for
him.)
Riordan is, of course, still favored to win on March 5. Should
he do so, the next question for California voters will be: Who's
the conservative in the race?
topics:
Taxes, Abortion, NATO