Brother Hugh, all I have left is a handful
of questions.
Q: Why is everything McClintock's fault? Schwarzenegger
has 100-percent name recognition and hundreds
of millions of dollars, but in the last three
weeks he has flunked the very first test of
Politics 101: Secure your base. Far from securing
the conservative base of the GOP, Arnold has
seemed to go out of his way to insult it. Warren
Buffett? A major supporter of Democratic causes,
including pro-choice organizations. School vouchers?
All Arnold would have had to do was offer a
few words of support for something like the
pilot voucher plan worked out by Pete Wilson
(who, after all, was twice elected governor).
Instead Arnold has announced that he opposes
vouchers of any kind. If he had been running
the kind of race you've been advocating
that is, if he had been insisted that the only
issue in this race was the budget, and then
demonstrating that he intended to fix the budget
without raising taxes then he'd have
won over the conservative base by now. He hasn't.
And you're on McClintock's back?
Q: What are the Arnoids so worried about? There
may be a few steely eyed fanatics on the McClintock
side, but the overwhelming number of Tom's supporters
aren't offering to march over a cliff with him,
just suggesting, as am I, that McClintock remain
in the race another couple of weeks. If he's
still trailing Arnold ten days or so before
the election, Tom can drop out then. (Depending
on what the Supreme Court makes of the decision
yesterday by our local jokers on the Ninth Circuit,
this timetable may change.) What harm would
McClintock's remaining in the race another couple
of weeks do, Hugh? A few absentee ballots may
get cast for McClintock that would otherwise
have been cast for Schwarzenegger, but very,
very few (our pal John Fund, who's doing perhaps
the best national reporting on the recall, assured
me the other day that none of the political
pros is at all worried about these early absentee
ballots). I mean, really. A politician makes
the conservative case to the voters of California
and the sky falls?
Q: Sure, the probabilities continue to favor
Schwarzenegger, even at this late date. But
where's your sense of the open-endedness of
politics? If you wrote out of American history
every politician who staged a dramatic, last-minute
surge or overcame enormous odds indeed,
who was written off by the journalistic and
political establishments of his day then
you'd have to excise one hero after another,
including the Gipper and Abe Lincoln. McClintock
only needs to get to 31 or 32 percent to win.
Even I can't say a McClintock victory is likely.
But even you can't say it's impossible.
And won't it be fun to watch Tom try?
Peter Robinson,
research fellow at the Hoover
Institution and host of Uncommon
Knowledge on PBS, is author, most recently,
of How
Ronald Reagan Changed My Life. Robinson
is a frequent contributor to NRO's weblog, "The
Corner."