|
Neo-confederate, would be Trump mini-me, Corey Stewart |
One question for the Republican Party of Virginia is whether or not it learned anything from the defeat of extremist nut case Roy Moore in Alabama this past Tuesday. At present, the two announce GOP primary candidates seeking to challenge Senator Tim Kaine are extremists and whack jobs much akin to Moore. One is a neo-Confederate would be Trump mini me named Corey Stewart who is popular with the rabid dog Virginia GOP base. The other is self-styled "bishop" E.W. Jackson who went down to a crushing defeat in 2013 to Ralph Northam in the Lt. Governor race. Jackson is a virulent homophobe and ,in my view, is utterly un-tethered from objective reality - something that makes him the perfect for Virginia Christofascists. A column in the
Virginian Pilot questions whether the Virginia GOP will nonetheless select one of these extremists or someone else far from normalcy to challenge Kaine. Given the lunacy of the Virginia GOP base, it is very possible Kaine will be given the gift of a lunatic as his opponent in November, 2018. Here are column highlights:
Roy Moore's
defeat in ruby-red Alabama may spell trouble for Virginia Republican Senate
hopefuls Corey Stewart and E.W. Jackson, both of whom, like Moore, have pursued
platforms far from the party's establishment wing.
Both Virginia
hopefuls entered the Republican primary campaigning to the right of fellow GOP
candidates: Stewart as a self- professed mini Donald Trump who has voiced
support for Confederate statues and Jackson a firebrand preacher who has called
gay people ill.
After the
results were tallied in Alabama - first-time candidate Doug Jones bested Moore
by more than 20,000 votes - Stewart, who had stumped for Moore, sounded off
against GOP leaders who he said "colluded" with Republicans to
undermine the former chief justice of the Alabama Supreme Court.
Jackson, an
African-American minister, tweeted: "The black vote did not turn out
against Roy Moore because of the sex scandal, but because of alleged racially
insensitive remarks & perceived disdain for black voters."
But experts say
such attention-grabbing statements don't represent a version of the Republican
Party that can topple Sen. Tim Kaine, D-Va., next year.
"Extremist
messaging is problematic in Virginia, but it's even problematic in
Alabama," said Stephen Farnsworth, a professor of political science at the
University of Mary Washington. Of Virginia, he said: "An evangelical
message or a nativist-focused message might get you a nomination, but it'll be
toxic in a general election."
The Virginia
GOP's craving for a not-so-extreme candidate could be why Del. Nick Freitas,
Culpeper, an Army veteran and tea party-style conservative, is picking up early
buzz as an alternative to Stewart.
An
hour after the results in Alabama came in, Freitas chose to post on Facebook
about a youth counseling program and not the election. He did not return
messages seeking comment Wednesday.
In
a 2012 interview with the group Americans for Truth about Homosexuality, which
has been called a hate group by the Southern Poverty Law Center, Jackson called
gay people "perverted" and "very sick people psychologically and
mentally and emotionally." Later in the same interview he called
homosexuality a "horrible sin" that "poisons culture" and
"destroys families."
[E]arlier this
week Jackson suggested Stewart had "some dealings" with the Muslim
Brotherhood - a jab Stewart labeled vintage Jackson.
"He's a
crackpot," Stewart said in a phone interview Wednesday from Alabama.
"He's getting even crazier." Stewart said
Democrats would not let Jackson off the hook despite his attempts to moderate
his comments on gay and transgender people - and neither would he.
Stewart shows no
signs of backing off his self-described anti- politically correct soapbox. In a minute-long
video on Facebook shortly after the results came in, Stewart promised to never
surrender to the "Republican establishment," which "colluded
together with the Democrats to undermine Judge Moore" and will follow suit
in his race next year.
No comments:
Post a Comment