NOEMIE EMERY WRITES THAT TRENT LOTT’S PROBLEMS ARE AN OPPORTUNITY FOR THE GOP:
ANY DAY NOW, the Democrats may come to regret deeply the moment the Trent Lott disturbance caught media fire. It is now a great mess for the Republican party, but one that has the potential to turn into a great opportunity, and one the party should eagerly seize. It is a chance for the GOP to clean up its act and its household, haul tons of old rubbish out of the attic, and banish some shopworn old ghosts. Having begun by delighting the Democrats by seeming to highlight the links they believed existed between racism and the conservative agenda, the furor may end by finally snapping those links, along with a number of sinister theories. And that will be all to the good.
Myth number one has always been that the Republican moderates were the much-put-upon noble soul of the party, while conservatives were the dark, ugly fringe. So who were the people who jumped on Lott first? Andrew Sullivan, David Frum, and George Will, among others. Social conservatives (such as the Family Research Council) roared for his ouster. In no time at all, the entire machinery of the vast right-wing media monster–the Wall Street Journal, the Washington Times, the New York Post, National Review, and the American Prowler (the online arm of the American Spectator); all the people on whom Al Gore and Tom Daschle blame the woes of the country–had locked Trent in the parlor with a pistol beside him, and urged him to do the right thing. Charles Krauthammer spoke for all of them when he wrote in the Washington Post on December 12: “Trent Lott must resign as majority leader . . . The point is not just what King and his followers did for African Americans, but what they did–by validating America’s original promise of freedom and legal equality–for the rest of America. How can Lott, speaking of ‘all these problems over all these years,’ not see this?” Indeed.
The mistake was not giving him the traditional bottle of whiskey with the pistol, I guess. He’s still in the parlor yelling to be let out.