« Election Round-Up | Main | Should Dems Emulate FDR's Big Tent Strategy? »

Robertson's Blessing

I wrote yesterday about the significance of Paul Weyrich's endorsement of Mitt Romney as an indication of Cultural Right determination to stop Rudy Giuliani. But ol' Rudy certainly offered his own rebuttal today, with the announcement that his candidacy was being endorsed by the Rev. Pat Robertson.

In an interview with Chris Cillizza of the Washington Post after the endorsement, Robertson seemed to embrace the idea that cultural issues just aren't that important right now:

Robertson said although he and Giuliani disagree on social issues, those disagreements "pale into insignificance" when measured against the import of the fight against global terrorism and radical Islam. "We need a man who sees clearly how to deal with that issue," said Robertson.

Since the other Republican candidates (other than Ron Paul) ain't exactly doves, this sure looks likes a repudiation of almost everything Robertson's ever said about the importance of abortion, gay rights, and other cultural issues. I mean, it's one thing to say you'll be loyal to the ticket if Giuliani is the nominee. It's another to endorse him as your own candidate.

I've tried to think of a Democratic analog for the unlikeliness of this particular endorsement, and the best I can come up with is Cindy Sheehan joining Hillary Clnton's campaign out of admiration for her energy proposals.

To be sure, Robertson's pretty long in the tooth, and doesn't have anything like the political clout he used to enjoy before the Christian Coalition imploded. But as a symbol of social conservative surrender to Rudyism, he's pretty important, and it will be a bit tougher now for his colleagues to publicly contemplate a third-party campaign against Pat's candidate.

Post a comment

Posting Policy

The Democratic Strategist's comments section welcomes intelligent discussion and debate from individuals representing every sector of the Democratic community.

Because of the spam problem, the first time you leave a comment you will have to sign up for a username by filling out a brief form. This just takes about two minutes and after that you will always be able to join the discussion just using your username and password.

Also, please note that all comments must be expressed in a mature and civil tone of voice. Individuals posting rude or otherwise inappropriate material will lose their access to the discussion.

Thank You, TDS staff

Thanks for signing in, . Now you can comment. (sign out)

(If you haven't left a comment here before, you may need to be approved by the site owner before your comment will appear. Until then, it won't appear on the entry. Thanks for waiting.)


Remember me?