The G.O.P.'s Troublemaker
Gary Bauer, the new voice of the Christian right, strikes
fear in the party: he won't play nice
By James Carney/Washington
(TIME, January 19) -- For the Republican Party, the Christian right has been a
blessing and a curse. It mobilizes millions of voters but
alienates a lot of others. In Christian Coalition leader Ralph
Reed, the G.O.P. had a baby-faced, backroom-working pol who
wasn't averse to cutting deals with the party's more secular
factions. The new leader of the party's Christian troops is Gary
Bauer, the longtime president of the pro-life Family Research
Council, and all he has in common with Reed is a baby face. "I'm
more comfortable pushing from the outside," he says.
Translation: he's not averse to bringing down the G.O.P. ship.
Which is what could happen in California this week. Bauer has
inserted himself into a battle between two Republicans in a
special election for a House seat in Santa Barbara. The district
is made up mostly of fiscally conservative, socially moderate
Republicans, which is why Speaker Newt Gingrich was backing
Brooks Firestone, an heir to the family tire business who became
a winemaker and, since 1994, a moderate, pro-choice state
assemblyman. But a furious Bauer ponied up $100,000 for an ad
campaign that zings Firestone for his refusal to back a ban on
partial-birth abortions and promotes instead the more
conservative underdog, state assemblyman Tom Bordonaro. (The ads
created a stir when local network affiliates refused to run
them, saying they described the procedure too graphically.) The
Firestone-Bordonaro infighting has been so damaging that some
Republicans fear that Lois Capps, the sole Democrat in Tuesday's
open primary, could top 50% in the three-way race and take the
once safe G.O.P. seat outright. To charges that he is spoiling
the G.O.P.'s chances, Bauer rebuts, "Should Lincoln have
supported a pro-slavery Republican in order to win a House seat?"
O.K., say Bauer's opponents, but what if the stakes are higher:
the whole Congress? Abortion has long divided the Republican
Party, and divided parties lose elections. When the 165 members
of the Republican National Committee gather for their annual
winter meeting this week in Palm Springs, Calif., they'll have a
stink bomb on their hands -- a resolution that would prohibit the
R.N.C. from funding any candidate not opposed to partial-birth
abortion. Bauer didn't write the resolution, but his politics
inspired it. "This isn't a matter of ideology, it's a matter of
human decency," says Colleen Parro, director of the Republican
National Coalition for Life. "The Republican Party should only
support candidates with a fundamental respect for human life."
That sounds sensible enough for a party with a pro-life plank in
its platform, but G.O.P. leaders are worried that the resolution
would set a precedent for imposing litmus tests on its
candidates. It would be especially damaging to the G.O.P. in the
Northeast, where pro-choicers like New Jersey Governor Christine
Whitman, who vetoed a partial-birth abortion ban, are already
struggling to be heard over the party's dominant wing of
Southern conservatives. Concerned that the resolution might
pass, R.N.C. chairman Jim Nicholson took the unusual step last
week of publicly urging committee members to vote no. Quoting
Ronald Reagan, Nicholson wrote, "Those who agree with us 80% of
the time are our allies, not our foes."
But Bauer lives for these showdowns. He challenged the G.O.P.'s
once sacred support of free trade by joining a coalition of
liberals in last year's high-profile campaign against renewal of
China's most-favored-nation trade status. And he confounded both
the country-club set and free-market purists by defending
government-run Social Security against talk of privatization and
pushing a $500-per-child tax credit over breaks for corporations
in last summer's budget deal.
The problem Bauer poses for the party is that it can't afford to
ignore his bomb throwing. Like Reed, who gave the Christian
Coalition a powerful national voice, Bauer has transformed the
Family Research Council from an organization with a 3,000-member
mailing list and a $200,000 budget into one with 455,000 members
and a $14 million budget. And like Reed, who had Pat Robertson
as his backer, Bauer has the widely followed radio evangelist
Rev. James Dobson behind him. With Reed off the stage in Atlanta
as a political consultant and Gingrich obsessing about tax cuts,
Christian activists have reason to feel ignored. "They feel they
helped elect a Republican majority and didn't get a lot in
return," says Reed.
That's where Bauer comes in, although his tactics do limit his
influence inside the Beltway. Gingrich doesn't consult him, and
neither does Senate majority leader Trent Lott. Which is why, to
the dismay of candidates like Pat Buchanan who hoped to woo his
followers, Bauer is now talking about running for President.
That would be the ultimate outsider's strategy.
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