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GOP cuts candidates a lot of moral slack on marriage
THE PHILADELPHIA INQUIRER ^ | Dick Polman

Posted on 06/01/2007 5:12:07 AM PDT by CheyennePress

What does it say about the Republicans - and about mainstream American culture - that so many current and potential GOP presidential candidates have track records as party animals?

Not so long ago, the folks who marketed themselves as exemplars of traditional "family values" were insisting that President Bill Clinton should be thrown out of office for lying about his personal peccadilloes. Yet today, these same folks have anointed, as their front-runner, a thrice-married former mayor whose kids barely speak to him. And Rudy Giuliani's chief challenger is John McCain, a self-confessed youthful philanderer who courted his future second wife while still married to his first, then launched his political career with his second wife's money.

A lot of conservatives don't like the top two - yet that's because they distrust Giuliani and McCain on the issues, not because both men have engaged in libertine behavior. And consider the personal histories of the conservatives' dream candidates:

Fred Thompson is now married for the second time, to a woman 25 years his junior, and has boasted of his wild 'n' crazy phase between marriages ("A lot of women chased me, and those that chased me tended to catch me").

And the other dream candidate is Newt Gingrich, who is now on his third marriage, and who famously cheated on his second wife while leading the impeachment crusade against Clinton. Wait, perhaps this item is more noteworthy: Newt served divorce papers on his first wife as she lay in a hospital bed recovering from cancer surgery.

Coming up short Right now, according to the latest Harris poll, those four guys are the top choices of likely Republican primary voters. It's the Mr. Clean guy, the one who's still married to his first wife, the guy who puts his 10 grandchildren into his campaign literature, who's stuck in fifth place. Such is Mitt Romney's predicament, in a year when even James Dobson, the religious-right power broker, can decree on his Christian radio show that he has prayed with Newt and that he has no moral qualms about Newt.

Clearly, there has been a sea change in the public mood. Having a zipper problem, by itself, is no longer deemed to be a serious disqualifier, even within the GOP camp. Candidates with indulgent personal histories probably can thank Clinton for this. Americans endured the Monica Lewinsky scandal, and when it was over, they rendered a split verdict. They told pollsters in 1999 that Clinton was a man of disreputable personal character - but they thought that he was doing his job well, and therefore that he should remain in office. Americans drew a sharp distinction between private and public virtue, and that seems to be the operative ethos today.

Twenty years ago this month, America was rocked by the Gary Hart sex scandal. The media discovered that the married Democratic front-runner was keeping company with a model named Donna Rice, and this news ultimately sank his candidacy. A long controversy ensued over whether journalists should have chased that story, but today the issue is settled. Journalists (joined by bloggers) basically root out whatever they can - New York magazine has been digging into the third Mrs. Giuliani's divorce papers from her first marriage - and most people either ignore this stuff or weigh everything case by case.

Sex, politics and religion Some religious conservatives still insist that private and public behavior are synonymous and that candidates should be judged accordingly. Richard Land, an influential leader who runs the Southern Baptist Convention, was dissing Giuliani on Fox News recently when he said: "If a man will be dishonest to his wife, he'll be dishonest with anybody." Land was referring, in part, to the fact that Rudy's second wife didn't know she was kaput until she heard her husband announce it at a news conference.

Perhaps sex and marriage issues simply seem unimportant on the eve of such a consequential election; after all, we're poised to pick the first new president since 9/11, and it's fair to suggest that we care less about a candidate's marriage vows than his or her vows to keep us safe. Certainly, this is Giuliani's calculation. As he said on Fox News, "I'm willing to rest on my job performance. ... I can perform under pressure, and I can perform irrespective of the fact that I do make mistakes in my personal life."

Cut them some slack But we're also more willing to cut candidates some slack on their personal lives - in part because we are far less willing than ever to idealize the institution of marriage. The latest federal health statistics bear this out. The marriage rate - marriages per 1,000 people - has dropped nearly 30 percent during the last quarter-century; the number of cohabitating couples has jumped tenfold since 1960.

There is, however, a desire to weigh each case on its merits. Adultery and divorce may not be automatic disqualifiers, but the specifics might be deal-breakers. A candidate who divorces amicably, and remains close to the kids, might be fine. A candidate who publicly humiliates a soon-to-be ex-spouse, and hurts his relations with the kids, might be more problematic, particularly if that behavior seems to suggest a broader pattern of arrogance. Giuliani fits the latter profile - his own daughter reportedly didn't bother telling Dad about her recent acceptance to Harvard - which is why he hasn't necessarily closed the deal yet with the primary electorate.

Still, the fact that he tops the GOP field tells us plenty about our post-Clinton mores. As one prominent Washingtonian remarked at a political conference, one year after the impeachment trial: "Maybe we expect too much (of a president). Each of us is only human, with our own foibles and shortcomings."

Thus spoke Kenneth Starr, the prosecutor who had dogged Clinton in the Lewinsky scandal. Really. I was there, and I heard him say it.


TOPICS: Culture/Society
KEYWORDS: culture; familyvalues; mrriage
I do find it interesting when over half of the GOP field has divorced and remarried. It's considered a biblical sin to do such. It's something our party has spoken out against. And yet...

What's at the heart of this?

1 posted on 06/01/2007 5:12:10 AM PDT by CheyennePress
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To: CheyennePress
Interesting take from a mouthpiece of a democratic party that has no morals at all...
2 posted on 06/01/2007 5:17:11 AM PDT by xcamel ("It's Thompson Time!")
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To: CheyennePress
It is interesting that people will give their choice candidate a pass on issues they would skewer the opposition for.

IIRC, that is also labeled hypocrisy.
3 posted on 06/01/2007 5:18:16 AM PDT by TomGuy
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To: CheyennePress
It's considered a biblical sin to do such. It's something our party has spoken out against.

The Bible has nothing to do with the Republican party.

Please provide a citation for your assertion that the GOP has "spoken out against" civil divorce.

4 posted on 06/01/2007 5:19:55 AM PDT by Jim Noble (We don't need to know what Cho thought. We need to know what Librescu thought.)
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To: CheyennePress
Well it reflects what most Americans do, they divorce and re-marry, including the “religious conservatives”. This issue will have zero effect on the elections, absolutely zero effect. If the democrats want to bring it up, they are going to regret it a lot.
5 posted on 06/01/2007 5:20:03 AM PDT by jveritas (Support The Commander in Chief in Times of War)
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To: CheyennePress

I could care less about their personal life. We don’t live in a theocracy. We have 10 candidates in the field, only two, McCain and Guiliani have been divorced and remarried.


6 posted on 06/01/2007 5:21:08 AM PDT by Perdogg
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To: TomGuy

Bill Clinton problem is that he had sex with a 22 years old intern in the oval office, but the worst thing is that he lied about it in front of the Grand Jury and in front of the world.


7 posted on 06/01/2007 5:21:41 AM PDT by jveritas (Support The Commander in Chief in Times of War)
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To: CheyennePress
While divorce is frowned upon, with todays no fault divorce laws make marriage a money game, we are going to see fewer candidates that haven't been divorced. However, it seems the line between the life of single men and women and adultery is being blurred to make it "OK".

Conservatives know the difference.

8 posted on 06/01/2007 5:22:30 AM PDT by WorkerbeeCitizen (I Relieve Myself In Islam's General Direction While I Deny Global Warming.)
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To: CheyennePress
“Bill Clinton should be thrown out of office for lying about his personal peccadilloes.”

I thought Clinton’s impeachment was about lying under oath and obstructing justice, a two-fer “sin”. Clinton’s “person peccadilloes” were rendered “public peccadilloes” because he was president of the United States. It is a real shame Clinton, with his sexual retardation and perpetual teenager personality, has led us to such a ridiculous discussion about divorce and the GOP.

9 posted on 06/01/2007 5:22:37 AM PDT by whereasandsoforth (Stamp out liberals with the big boot of truth)
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To: whereasandsoforth

This guy is a liar about Newt.

Here’s the truth about Newt:

“In 1992, his Democratic opponent, Tony Center, ran an ad claiming that Gingrich had “delivered divorce papers to his wife the day after her cancer operation,” a false accusation, though friends have acknowledged that he discussed divorce terms to his estranged wife while visiting her in the hospital.”


10 posted on 06/01/2007 5:26:13 AM PDT by Perdogg
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To: CheyennePress
Not so long ago, the folks who marketed themselves as exemplars of traditional "family values" were insisting that President Bill Clinton should be thrown out of office for lying about his personal peccadilloes.

No Dick, we insisted that President Bill Clinton should be thrown out of office for committing felony perjury.

11 posted on 06/01/2007 6:18:21 AM PDT by FormerLib (Sacrificing our land and our blood cannot buy protection from jihad.-Bishop Artemije of Kosovo)
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To: CheyennePress
Newt served divorce papers on his first wife as she lay in a hospital bed recovering from cancer surgery.

This is my sister-in-law's favorite anecdote ... except that it's grown a tad in the past 13 years. I believe right now she is up to "What about Gingrich serving his wife with divorce papers while they were wheeling her into surgery!"

TS
(Actually, I think in the latest version he came into the O.R. while she was on the operating table. Probably didn't wear a mask, either.)

12 posted on 06/01/2007 6:41:36 AM PDT by Tanniker Smith (I didn't know she was a Liberal when I married her.)
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