WASHINGTON BULLETIN
February 25, 2000 7:00PM
"AGENTS OF INTOLERANCE"
In Virginia Beach this morning, John McCain denounced Pat Robertson and Jerry Falwell as "agents of intolerance." He made it clear that he did not mean to impugn religious conservatives generally, praising Charles Colson and James Dobson even though they do not support his candidacy. McCain said that "we embrace the fine members of the religious conservative community. But that does not mean that we will pander to their self-appointed leaders."

McCain also tried to show that he was not aiming his fire exclusively at the Right by mentioning Al Sharpton and Louis Farrakhan as "agents of intolerance." Political analysts are always comparing religious conservatives to black militants: They're mainstays of their respective parties, but everybody else is turned off by politicians who pander to them. McCain's denunciation of Robertson and Falwell is supposed to serve the same purpose as Bill Clinton's denunciation of Sister Souljah in 1992 — to reassure the public that he will stand up to his party's unpopular core constituencies.

Does the comparison work in this case? It is certainly true that Republican leaders refuse to criticize Robertson and Falwell when they say or do foolish things, just as Democrats indulge Farrakhan and Sharpton. But Robertson and Falwell haven't done as much worth criticizing. Neither man has incited murder or falsely charged someone with rape for political purposes, as Sharpton has; they do not urge their followers to stop paying taxes, tell them to stop thinking of themselves as Americans, or preach that their opponents are subhuman, as Farrakhan does.

In 1992, meanwhile, Clinton didn't trash Benjamin Hooks or Jesse Jackson; he took on Sister Souljah, who had suggested that black murderers take a break from killing other blacks for a week and kill whites instead. Robertson and Falwell have said nothing so outrageous. The equivalent action by McCain would be to attack the folks who advocate bombing abortion clinics — although this gesture would not be terribly newsworthy, since Republicans have never tolerated them.

Moreover, McCain doesn't actually make the case against Robertson or Falwell for anything they've done. He doesn't dispute Robertson's theories about the Freemasons, or criticize Falwell for those videotapes suggesting Clinton orchestrated murders. McCain simply takes it as a given that they are intolerant, hateful, divisive, etc. He can do this because liberals have made them into devil-figures. And liberals have made them devil-figures because they oppose abortion and gay rights.

These are positions McCain shares (see next item). What then separates Falwell and Robertson from Gary Bauer, a McCain supporter who was with him today? McCain says that Falwell and Robertson have distorted his pro-life position. But McCain has made confusing remarks about abortion. We think that he was simply confused, and that his critics are wrong to suggest that he is secretly pro-choice; but the latter interpretation is well within the bounds of normal political debate.

The remaining difference is that Falwell and Robertson disagree vehemently with McCain's position on campaign-finance reform. In McCain-speak, this disagreement becomes "their failed philosophy that money is our message." McCain and his spokesmen have already suggested that pro-lifers opposed to him have turned "a cause into a business." The folks at the National Right to Life Committee, he implies, are more interested in their pocketbooks than in the unborn — an argument that will strike anyone who has spent any time around the NRLC, even those of us who think the NRLC has gone overboard in attacking McCain, as absurd. (Nobody who works for the NRLC has ever made as much as McCain does.)

What, then, does McCain mean by "political intolerance" and "political tactics of division and slander" that "shame our faith, our party, and our country"? It's hard to avoid the conclusion that he means something like "active opposition to John McCain." He keeps complaining about slander and smears, but he dishes out far more than he takes.

MCCAIN'S PRO-LIFE VEEP
Will John McCain pick a pro-life running mate if he wins the GOP presidential nomination? Sounds like that's what he's told Gary Bauer. In a conference call last week, Bauer said the following to his supporters, some of whom have questioned his endorsement of McCain: "When I went to talk to [McCain], I of course brought up immediately many of the issues that you and I have great concerns about. ... After those conversations, I am absolutely convinced, beyond a shadow of a doubt, that Senator McCain is committed to a pro-life running mate." (Bauer repeats the claim today in a Washington Times op-ed: "I am personally satisfied that Mr. McCain is committed to naming a pro-life running mate.")

Is it possible Bauer's simply getting taken in by vague pledges from McCain to pick a running mate with compatible views? Possibly. Except that Bauer, moments later in the conference call, lights into George W. Bush for such tactics: "In five debates in a row, I directly asked Gov. Bush on some of the things we care the most about. To this day, he continues to not commit to a pro-life running mate."

Many pro-lifers, of course, have been satisfied with Bush's commitments; National Right to Life endorsed him. It's Bauer's prerogative not to be satisfied. If we assume he's holding Bush and McCain to the same standard on abortion, however, it sounds like McCain made a specific pro-life promise to Bauer.

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Updated By:
Ramesh Ponnuru - Senior Editor
John J. Miller - National Political Reporter
Kate Dwyer - Editorial Associate

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