By Amanda Marcotte, cross-posted from RH Reality Check
After what is the most protracted, ridiculous run-up to a primary
season I’ve seen in the couple of decades I’ve closely followed
politics, we’re finally going to actually begin the Republican
primaries, a mere three months after everyone is completely exhausted of
them. The entire situation is particularly frustrating, because the
majority of the focus, from the media and the candidates, has been on
Iowa, even though the state has been known repeatedly to give far more
weight---and even victories---to candidates that have literally no
chance of winning the Republican nomination, because these candidates
hit a bunch of buttons for Christian conservatives but have little
appeal outside of those circles. The 2008 win for Mike Huckabee, who was
quickly wiped out when a more diverse group of Republicans got a crack
at primary voting, is a perfect example of this.
To make the entire situation even more frustrating, for all the
hundreds of cable news hours and column inches dedicated to the Iowa
caucus, abortion is rarely mentioned. The narrative this year is that
voters are mainly concerned with the economy, which translates for
conservatives into vague concerns about the deficit, even though there’s
no reason to think that lowering the deficit through spending cuts
would do anything but exacerbate the recession. The problem with
applying that logic to Iowa is that it utterly fails to explain the
voting choices of the Christian right which rules the caucus in the
state. The differences in economic policies between the Republicans
simply aren’t dramatic enough to explain Mitt Romney’s inability to get
more than a quarter of voters behind him, for one thing. For another,
just because the voters say they care mostly about economic issues to a
pollster doesn’t mean that they don’t vote their gut when it actually
comes time to make a decision.
To really understand Iowa, you need to understand the primacy of
abortion as an issue to the Christian right. It’s baffling how little
attention this gets, considering the tendency of all the
candidates---and especially those whose numbers in Iowa, like Rick
Santorum and Ron Paul, eclipse what they can get in most other
states---to make frequent statements about how they consider banning
abortion to be a number one priority and the big issue of our time.
Economic issues are confusing and the difference between candidates is
too hazy to matter to the Republican base. Foreign policy doesn’t seem
to matter that much at all to voters this year. But abortion is a nice,
simple issue, and the candidates by and large seem to get what the media
doesn’t: The more you pound the table and stereotype women who get
abortions as heartless slatterns, the better you do in the polls.
The inability of the Beltway media to grasp this creates situations like the one described at Talking Points Memo,
where it’s deemed some kind of mystery as to why Ron Paul has surged in
the polls, nearly gaining on Romney and truly threatening to beat him
on Tuesday. Paul calls himself a “libertarian,” and this is seen by the
punditry as somehow in opposition to the evangelical right, a belief
that seems to be based on the questionable notion that libertarianism is
a separate philosophy instead of just an extremely cranky version of
the same old conservatism.
It is true that if you think Republican voters in Iowa really are
motivated by the economy, Paul’s newfound popularity is a bit hard to
grasp. But if you realize that they’re mostly obsessed with women’s
uteruses, suddenly his popularity makes a lot more sense. Paul has been
blanketing Iowa with anti-choice ads
that make the risible and extremely unlikely claim that he saw doctors
throwing a live baby away to let it die. This kind of story is the sort
of urban myth anti-choicers exchange amongst each other: fantasies
generated to justify their irrational fear and hatred of abortion
providers, because the alternative is to admit that they’re just out to
control women’s bodies. By speaking to anti-choice fanatics in their own
language of fantasy over reality, Paul signaled that “libertarian” is a
meaningless label, and that he’s actually one of the tribe.
(Interestingly, the danger in indulging elaborate religious fantasies
like this is that other fantasists will engage you, which Paul found out
when a radio host asked him
why he didn’t swoop in and rescue the supposedly living baby. The more
elaborate fantasy of the radio host inadvertently exposed the giant plot
hole in Paul’s story-spinning.)
Compare Paul’s lurid fantasies about babies in buckets with Romney’s
more staid, reality-based anti-choice views. Romney’s against abortion,
sure, but as far as I know, he basically avoids spinning the tall tales
that characterize the anti-choice movement’s communication style. In
fact, it’s hard to imagine Romney spinning tales about what
anti-choicers wished abortion looked like. Romney has a straightforward,
if boring, rhetorical style that’s completely opposed to the outlandish
fantasies the religious right trades in daily. Also, you get the
impression that he’d be a little repulsed spinning such a graphic and
detailed whopper. Thus, the Christian right that controls the Iowa
Republican caucus process can’t ever see him as one of them.
Of course, admitting the centrality of abortion---and more
importantly, of fantastical beliefs about it that have no relationship
to reality---to the Iowa caucus would basically be to admit that it
probably doesn’t matter that much in the long run. While misinformation
can spread rapidly in the mainstream right (or any mainstream group),
there’s something so icky and obviously false about the kinds of myths
that get anti-choice fanatics moving that those myths simply can’t work
their magic on a more diverse conservative electorate.
It’s a shame, really. Because if the Iowa caucus was regarded in the
light it deserves---as a reflection of what Christian right extremists
are thinking right now, instead of as a predictor of larger trends---it
could be incredibly useful. It would be nice, for instance, if the
nation at large was aware of how Christian conservatives are voting not
because of reality or even realistic-sounding misinformation, but
because they believe stories that are too fantastical on their surface
to be true. If the nation as a whole really, truly understood that, the
religious right would have a much harder time getting power.
Tuesday, January 3, 2012
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