By Hunter Baker on 5.14.07 @ 12:07AM
Or was it one of LBJ lucky genius? Live from Houston...
Rudy Giuliani came to Houston and invoked specters of 1960.
Seasoned observers, including Houston Baptist University president
Robert B. Sloan, noted Giuliani's visit to HBU and recalled John F.
Kennedy's famed speech before Protestant ministers in Houston in
which he won the ministers' confidence by promising to be a bad
Catholic. In other words, he was going to run America his way and
the Pope wouldn't figure in his plans. If the ministers had known
the stuff about JFK's personal life we know today, they wouldn't
have worried about his fealty to the Pope and he could have saved
his airfare. Giuliani came to Houston Baptist as another Catholic
addressing Protestants and stressing his differences with Rome, but
this time the key interest wasn't religious freedom or foreign
control. This time the issue was abortion and Rudy knew the
Baptists weren't going to be relieved the way JFK's audience
was.
Even though the mayor reached the event in advance of the
appointed starting time, he took the stage late. When he began with
his script on the podium before him he looked like anything but the
hero of 9-11 and the former mayor of a city of nearly 10 million
people. He was nervous. He stammered. He sweated and looked pale.
This was the look of a speaker facing a hostile audience. I was
five feet away and wondered if he'd have to call the whole thing
off.
That's when shades of Lyndon B. Johnson set in. A baby burbled
audibly in the silent crowd. Perhaps it was pure serendipity that
the child wore a t-shirt proclaiming "I love NY," but I remembered
the old stories of LBJ's campaign appearances where he exhibited
tremendous flair by tossing a gorgeous white Stetson into the
assembled mass. What the folks never knew was that the greatest of
Texas campaigners had practiced his aim and had a staffer charged
with the task of catching that hat at every stop. When Giuliani
walked over to the baby, mugged with it, and jumped back to the
podium proclaiming, "Hey, I am a politician!" to the obvious
delight of the audience, I wondered how often such happy accidents
occur. Nobody at HBU was skeptical. They loved it and the ice was
broken.
Hizzoner had a better time of it after that. His nervousness
faded and took on the difficult task of telling a group of mostly
pro-lifers about his pro-choice views. What I observed was a simple
human dynamic. People who heard the speech appreciated Mayor
Giuliani's honesty. His basic pitch was simple, "We can disagree
about abortion, but I'm the best guy to handle the war on terror
and to protect our growing economy from excessive taxation and
regulation." Responses went both ways. Some agreed with him to
begin with. Others liked him but would never consider voting for
him because of their strong pro-life views. A third group, however,
were won over by him. They admired his directness and were willing
to meet him on his terms. I have no doubt Giuliani gained some
voters in the group of hearers at Houston Baptist University. He
will win people over wherever he gives that speech.
While I think the mayor's presentation will win voters, I am
equally certain that he cannot overcome the broader damage incurred
by being forthrightly pro-choice. Politically active pro-lifers who
wanted to see him offer an acceptable compromise on the pro-life
front have already been backing out. More will leave now that he is
fully declared.
Why can't his campaign take the hit and perhaps prevail? The
answer is simple. The Republican party is now a pro-life party. The
pro-life movement is stronger today than it has been in its entire
post-Roe existence and will only gain credibility as ultrasound
technology improves still further and becomes a larger part of the
imagery of everyday life. In addition, a vote for Rudy says that
abortion is really not that important after all. It is less
important than things like money and terrorism. You can dress it up
in lofty talk about agreeing to disagree as much as you like, but
acceptance of those terms implies the trivialization of the life
issue.
Very few in the movement are willing to take the massive step
backward of having both parties be pro-choice in their leadership
which is exactly what would happen if Giuliani were to become our
nominee. That logic will ultimately prevail and there is
plenty of time for it to settle in among conservative voters.
topics:
Abortion