Conservatives were electrified yesterday by news that Barney
Frank had taken
$200,000 from his own pocket to help fund his re-election
campaign against insurgent Republican Sean Bielat. Having
covered the Bielat campaign, however,
I’m not entirely surprised by Frank’s plight:
Hey, when a congressman and his
heckler boyfriend fly to the Virgin Islands
aboard the private jet of a hedge-fund billionaire in the midst
of an economic apocalypse the congressman arguably
helped cause…
Do you really need polls to tell you that might hurt
his chances for re-election? Yeah, I know it’s Massachusetts, but
the economy’s in a ditch, and Barney’s up there sippin’ on
a Slurpee, so to speak.
There may be limits even to the credulity of Massachusetts
liberals.
Now, before anyone screams “homophobia” for my reference to
Barney’s boyfriend (“partner” being the politically correct
term), let’s point out that
gay conservatives like Daniel Blatt are fed up with having
Barney Frank as the Official Gay Political Poster Boy — in much
the same way that black conservatives get tired of being told
Al Sharpton speaks for their “community.” (Ask
Allen West or Charles
Lollar about that.)
Barney Frank and some other Democrats appear to be on the
verge of learning
the hard way that the appeals of identity politics and partisan
loyalty can be stretched beyond the breaking point, as
Brian McGrory of the Boston Globe explains:
For the last three decades, the political establishments in
Boston and Washington have excused Frank’s consistently obnoxious
behavior as Barney being Barney. Maybe they’ve done it because he
was unique as an openly gay congressman. Maybe it was out of
deference for the way he unapologetically and effectively carried
the flag for the most liberal of causes. Maybe it was out of fear
that he’d train his quick wit and substantial intellect against
anyone who happened in his path.
But now voters are looking to D.C. and wondering what has gone
wrong in a city and a system that is having such a hard time
getting things right. The same character flaws that were forgiven
in good times might wear thin when times are tough.
Read the whole thing.