Beware of conservative magazines bearing cover stories
By Jennifer Rubin
WashPost
Haley Barbour has gotten himself in a heap of trouble. By praising White Citizens' Councils, appearing clueless about the history of racial injustice in the South, giving the Democrats a free swing at him and reviving recollections of another shockingly inappropriate racial statement, Barbour has gone a long way toward blowing up his presidential candidacy before it began. Other than the amazing propensity of seemingly sophisticated politicians to say remarkably self-defeating things, the episode is noteworthy in several respects.
First, this is the second Republican contender who was profiled by the Weekly Standard, afforded an in-depth and largely positive treatment focusing on his success as a governor, and who wound up making a mess of his debut on the conservative national stage. The first was Gov. Mitch Daniels, who let on that he wanted a "truce" on social issues, thereby inflaming social conservatives. The lesson here is that governors may be experienced executives, but they don't necessarily navigate well (or take direction from nervous aides) when thrust into the national limelight.
Second, this recalls the race for the Republican National chairmanship in 2009, when Katon Dawson, the South Carolina state party chair and the leading contender at the time for the RNC, got himself in hot water with the revelation that he belonged to a whites-only country club. That, frankly, is how Michael Steele got the job -- the most formidable opponent imploded and the party couldn't face the prospect of a PR disaster just months after Barack Obama was elected as the first black president. It also recalls Rand Paul's mega-gaffe on the 1964 Civil Rights Act. (Many conservatives, including myself, roundly criticized him for that one, but he recovered.)
(More here.)
WashPost
Haley Barbour has gotten himself in a heap of trouble. By praising White Citizens' Councils, appearing clueless about the history of racial injustice in the South, giving the Democrats a free swing at him and reviving recollections of another shockingly inappropriate racial statement, Barbour has gone a long way toward blowing up his presidential candidacy before it began. Other than the amazing propensity of seemingly sophisticated politicians to say remarkably self-defeating things, the episode is noteworthy in several respects.
First, this is the second Republican contender who was profiled by the Weekly Standard, afforded an in-depth and largely positive treatment focusing on his success as a governor, and who wound up making a mess of his debut on the conservative national stage. The first was Gov. Mitch Daniels, who let on that he wanted a "truce" on social issues, thereby inflaming social conservatives. The lesson here is that governors may be experienced executives, but they don't necessarily navigate well (or take direction from nervous aides) when thrust into the national limelight.
Second, this recalls the race for the Republican National chairmanship in 2009, when Katon Dawson, the South Carolina state party chair and the leading contender at the time for the RNC, got himself in hot water with the revelation that he belonged to a whites-only country club. That, frankly, is how Michael Steele got the job -- the most formidable opponent imploded and the party couldn't face the prospect of a PR disaster just months after Barack Obama was elected as the first black president. It also recalls Rand Paul's mega-gaffe on the 1964 Civil Rights Act. (Many conservatives, including myself, roundly criticized him for that one, but he recovered.)
(More here.)
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