Values over victory
Republicans
care more about morality than they do victory, according to a recent
public opinion poll, and both God and the Democratic Party are rejoicing
in the news, although for different reasons.
A
McClatchy-Marist poll found that 38 percent of prospective Republican
voters want a GOP nominee who shares their values, compared to 15
percent who prefer a candidate who can win.
McClatchy-Marist poll |
Winning isn't everything, as they say, but in most cases people just say that as a justification for losing. The primary season is still six months away, leaving pols in D.C. scratching their heads wondering whether this is early onset defeatism or the overzealous idealism of a truly principled, pious Christian demographic.
Depending
on their proximity to the Bible Belt, conservative voters either
dislike or vehemently loath President Obama. In the eyes of the millions
of people who watch Fox News or listen to conservative talk radio, all
of America's ills are attributable to the "liberal fascism" and
wealth-distributing socialism that they are told are trademarks of
modern progressivism.
If
that’s true, how then is it possible that those same people care less
about defeating Obama than they do about having a candidate who shares
their beliefs? Are they not getting the message? Were Glenn Beck's
twisted chalk-board conspiracies too complex for the right-wing masses
to understand the grave importance of ousting Obama from power?
For
Democrats, who hope to keep the White House and maybe pick up enough
seats in Congress to take back majority control of the House of
Representatives, a confirmed date for the coming rapture wouldn't come
close to beating this news.
Polls
show a consistent dissatisfaction with the stubborn partisanship and
bitter ideological battles that have become the norm in the barbed-wire
arena of political discourse.
If
Republicans won't settle for anything less than a saint in 2012, their
less-than-enthusiastic support for the GOP nominee will be reflected in
voter turnout. If their candidate fails the piety test, they might not
show up at all.
The
GOP needs a miracle candidate in 2012, someone who can rile the Tea
Party base, rally the social conservative base, and yet still manage to
persuade the independents that Change didn't happen and Hope doesn't
float. They must be passionate enough to excite the far right wing in
the primary race and yet sane enough not to disenfranchise moderates,
offend women, and enrage middle class laborers in the general election.
It's
a tall order even under the most ideal conditions. With a Mormon and an
evangelical cheese head topping the polls in the nomination race,
divine intervention may be the only solution.
Luckily
for conservatives, they've demonstrated the depth of their morality and
the strength in their principles that if anyone's prayers are answered,
it will definitely be theirs first.
(Cross-posted at Muddy Politics.)
(Cross-posted at Muddy Politics.)
Labels: 2012 election, Barack Obama, polls, Republicans
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