Friday, March 9, 2007
Giuliani and the GOP
It should be no surprise that the National Catholic Register opposes Rudy Giuliani despite his promise to nominate judges in the mold of Alito and Roberts. But the editors make a larger point about Giuliani and the GOP's future:
The power a president exerts over his party’s character is nearly absolute. The party is changed in his image. He picks those who run it and, both directly and indirectly, those who enter it.
Thus, the Republicans in the 1980s became Reaganites. The Democrats in the 1990s took on the pragmatic Clintonite mold. Bush’s GOP is no different, as Ross Douthat points out in “It’s His Party” in the March Atlantic Monthly.
A Republican Party led by a pro-abortion politician would become a pro-abortion party. Parents know that, when we make significant exceptions to significant rules, those exceptions themselves become iron-clad rules to our children. It’s the same in a political party. A Republican Party led by Rudy Giuliani would be a party of contempt for the pro-life position, which is to say, contempt for the fundamental right on which all others depend.
Some pro-life conservatives, such as our own Steve Bainbridge, are apparently not as worried.
https://mirrorofjustice.blogs.com/mirrorofjustice/2007/03/giuliani_and_th.html