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FOR REPUBLICANS IT IS DÉJÀ VU ALL OVER AGAIN
In my
opinion, the Republican Party in Georgia made a grievous error in 1996
when they denied Johnny Isakson the GOP nomination for the U.S. Senate.
The reason for refusing Isakson the nomination was that some in the party
thought him soft on the abortion issue. The party instead chose
charisma-challenged Atlanta businessman Guy Millner, who promptly lost the
general election to Democrat Max Cleland. As a result, Georgia was
subjected to six years of a do-nothing senator with a strong pro-abortion
record who consistently voted the Democratic Party line. How all of this
benefited the state and the Republican cause still baffles me.
Isakson, currently a three-term member of Congress from Georgia’s 6th
District, is running again for the Senate to succeed retiring Democratic
Senator Zell Miller. To date, he has no Republican opposition and has
raised more than a million dollars for his campaign, which should give any
potential opponent pause for reflection. No wildly popular Georgia
Democrat is waiting in the wings to take him on, because Georgia has no
wildly popular Democrats except for Zell Miller, and Miller can’t wait to
see Washington in his rearview mirror. So, things look good for Isakson.
Or do they?
As
that noted political analyst Yogi Berra once observed, “It is déjà vu all
over again.” Isakson’s candidacy is being strongly opposed by Tom Perdue.
Perdue, you might recall, was chief of staff to Democratic governors
George Busbee and Joe Frank Harris. Today, he is a take-no-prisoners
Republican political consultant who counts among his successes the
election of Tennessee Senator Bill Frist and Georgia’s late Senator Paul
Coverdell. He also helped engineer Saxby Chambliss’ Senate victory over
the incumbent Cleland, although given Cleland’s record in the Senate, I
suspect Sheila, the family wonder dog, could have beaten him.
Perdue
says he will do whatever he can to see that Isakson is denied the
nomination, up to and including supporting a Democrat, if necessary.
Perdue has been criss-crossing the state, trying to find someone to oppose
Isakson. Thus far, he has met with little success. Word is that Lynn
Westmoreland, of Sharpsburg, the Republican minority leader in the Georgia
House of Representatives, is the latest politician being wooed by Perdue
to run against Isakson.
If the
Republicans are serious about capturing Georgia’s second Senate seat – and
I am sure they are – then whoever is in charge of such things should tell
Tom Perdue to either get on the team and support Isakson for the Senate or
do his campaign consulting somewhere else. Republicans in Georgia by now
should have figured out who their real enemy is. (Hint: Can you say
“Democrat”?)
As for
the abortion issue, Isakson says, “My record is similar to many
Republicans. I support the ban on partial birth abortions. I support
consent and parental notification and I am opposed to federal funding for
abortions. I do not support a constitutional amendment to ban abortion,
which has never been voted on in Congress. As President Bush has said, we
can’t change the Constitution, but we can change people’s hearts.”
That
isn’t good enough for Tom Perdue, who is extremely hawkish on the subject
of abortion. It doesn’t take long in talking to Perdue to get the feeling
that his animosity for Isakson is as personal as it is philosophical,
which brings up another interesting point: I don’t think anyone would have
ever accused Governor Roy Barnes of being best buddies with Zell Miller.
Yet, when Paul Coverdell died, Barnes appointed Miller to serve out the
remainder of the late senator’s term. Why? Because Barnes put the
interest of the Democratic Party ahead of personal piques. That kind of
behavior seems extremely difficult for Republicans to grasp.
It
will be interesting to see if Republicans learned their lesson in the 1996
senatorial race and will work together to put Johnny Isakson in the U.S.
Senate. Or, will they allow Tom Perdue’s Anyone But Isakson campaign to
continue unabated and risk giving the seat back to a liberal pro-choice
Democrat like Max Cleland? Who knows? Even Sheila, the family wonder
dog, has a hard time understanding Republicans.
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