The Steering Committee of the Alabama Republican Party has taken
the rare step of officially requesting that one of the state’s two
GOP U.S. Senators change a publicly announced position in a
high-profile Washington battle. Specifically, the state party
leaders have
passed a resolution “respectfully call[ing] upon” Sen.
Richard Shelby to “reconsider and reverse his decision to support
Senator [Chuck] Hagel to be Secretary of Defense.” The resolution,
passed early this afternoon, blasts Hagel for statements “favorable
toward” countries “that we believe to be enemies of the United
States of America,” and also criticizes him for “not being a
supporter of Israel, the only dependable ally the United States of
America has in that part of the world.” It notes, too, that “many
Alabama citizens have expressed outrage at Senator Shelby’s
decision.”
This is big stuff. Sen. Shelby is a powerful politician, and the
state party long has been supportive of him. But his support of
Hagel seems to really have created a backlash.
“It has been an outpouring from people across the state,” State
Republican Chairman Bill Armistead told me. “There have been phone
calls from a lot of people, plus we’ve all been approached by
people we know at churches and in our communities. I haven’t seen
anything this strong in opposition to something done by one of our
representatives in Congress in a long time.”
(Armistead stressed that this does not indicate opposition to
Shelby in general, but only that it was very strong opposition to
this one decision.)
This resolution by the state Republican Party comes on top of a
very energetic response, along similar lines, by
state Tea Party groups, who sent out blast emails urging people
to call or write Shelby’s office to complain. With polls showing
growing public opposition across the political spectrum to
Hagel’s nomination, I think Republican senators are missing the
boat if they don’t understand that this is one fight they can win
by standing firm — not just win legislatively, but win politically
too. And I bet if they put some pressure on some Democrats in the
Senate, those Democrats will be seeing the same reaction among
their own constituents and might start feeling some real heat if
they continue to support the nomination themselves. And, of course,
opposition to Hagel has lots to recommend it on a substantive,
principled level as well.