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Mod Squad
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The world
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has been paying Republican moderates a lot of attention lately, and the
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moderates are finding it all a bit disorienting. "We're just so popular now,"
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said a bewildered Melissa Pezzetti, deputy executive director of the Ripon
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Society, when I paid a visit earlier this week to the group's tiny office,
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located in a brick low-rise behind the Fertilizer Institute on Capitol Hill.
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"Us moderates don't make news very often."
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The Ripon Society is
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itself an emblem of how wispy is the movement to which Republican moderates
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belong. Founded at Harvard in the 1960s by college Republicans put off by the
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vulgarity of the Goldwater campaign, the society flirted with liberalism during
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the '70s (it even sued the Republican National Committee over minority
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representation at political conventions!) and has been drifting a little bit to
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the right ever since. Today, according to Executive Director Mike Gill, a
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former aide to Rep. Paul Gillmor, R.-Ohio, the classic Ripon Republican
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venerates Ronald Reagan (whose scrapes with "gypsy moth" Eastern Republican
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moderates during the 1980s are apparently forgotten) but tends to part company
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with the party on social issues such as abortion. Membership, Gill says with a
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rueful laugh, is between 15,000 and 20,000.
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The heyday for moderate Republicans was probably the late
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1950s, when Dwight Eisenhower was president and Modern (i.e., moderate)
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Republicanism was the prevailing conservative orthodoxy. The WASP aristocracy
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still controlled Wall Street, the Ivy League, and much of the press. The
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Republican Party's liberal wing (as moderates were then called) was filled with
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noble purpose about civil rights and women's rights, two issues on which
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Democrats would not achieve dominance until the 1960s. The remarkable work on
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civil rights done by Robert Kennedy's Justice Department bore a distinctly
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Republican stamp: John Doar, a celebrated member of that team--who
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single-handedly stopped an incipient riot at Medgar Evars' funeral by stepping
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into an angry crowd and yelling, "Anybody around here knows that I stand for
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what's right!"--was an Eisenhower appointee. (For a fictitious portrait of a
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quintessential GOP moderate, click .)
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Now that civil rights
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issues have become mired in complexity and uncertainty about affirmative
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action, the grand sense of purpose in being a moderate Republican doesn't seem
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to exist anymore. Perhaps the emblematic moderate-Republican stance on civil
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rights during this decade was Sen. John Danforth's championing of
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affirmative-action foe Clarence Thomas for the Supreme Court at the same
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time Danforth was pushing the Bush White House to sign the
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affirmative-action-friendly 1991 civil rights bill (which it eventually did).
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Even regionally, moderate Republicans have lost their identity. For years they
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were a bloc of Easterners perpetually at war for control of the party with
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Midwestern conservatives. Now Eastern and Midwestern Republicans tend to blend
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together in opposition to more conservative Southern Republicans (a subspecies
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that didn't exist before) and conservative Westerners on Rust Belt issues such
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as acid rain.
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Since the districts of moderate Republicans, especially in
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the East, tend to be heavily Democratic, and the ideological differences
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between moderate Republicans and New Democrats are now microscopic (or perhaps
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nonexistent), it's a bit baffling that moderate Republicans don't switch party
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affiliation and become Democrats. There are a few Democrats around who began
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life as moderate Republicans--Californian former Rep. and Clinton White House
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Chief of Staff Leon Panetta is one--but for most (including Panetta), the
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switch was made at least two decades ago. That's when former New York City
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Mayor John Lindsay, former Sen. Don Riegle of Michigan, and former Westchester
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County U.S. Rep. Ogden Reid all jumped ship. Practically the only nationally
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known Republican politicians to defect to the Democrats in recent years are New
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York Lt. Gov. Betsy McCaughey Ross (who's a head case) and Rep. Carolyn
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McCarthy of New York (who ran after her husband was killed and her son injured
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by a gun-toting lunatic on the Long Island Railroad). By contrast, a steady
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trickle of conservative Democrats, including Rep. Billy Tauzin of Louisiana and
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Sen. Ben Nighthorse Campbell of Colorado, have switched to the Republican side
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in recent years.
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Why the persistence of
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the Republican moderate as a subspecies? One explanation is simple mislabeling.
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A conservative such as John McCain of Arizona can get called a moderate simply
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because he bucks his party on a few issues (campaign finance, tobacco) and is
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found to be personally likable by the press. Sometimes all it takes in terms of
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apostasy is a pro-choice stance on abortion--as was the case with former Sen.
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Alan Simpson of Wyoming. Black conservatives frequently get called "moderate"
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simply because they maintain some vestigial sensitivity about race.
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Conservative former Democrats like Tauzin get called "moderate" simply because
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they used to be Democrats.
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Another explanation is opportunism. The liberal views of
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Kevin Phillips have greater market value because they can be presented to the
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public as startling Republican apostasy. Ralph Neas, who for many years ran the
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Leadership Conference on Civil Rights, always identified himself as a
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Republican; he dropped the pretense only when he ran for the House last fall as
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a Democrat in liberal Montgomery County, Md., losing to Connie Morella (the
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most liberal Republican in Congress). In Vermont, liberal challengers to
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independent Rep. Bernie Sanders have no choice but to run in the Republican
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primary, since Sanders has co-opted the state's Democratic Party.
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For most moderate
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Republicans, though, the principal reasons not to switch party are nostalgia
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and aristocratic indolence. The prevailing style of the GOP moderate is modest
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and self-effacing. When I asked the Ripon Society's Pezzetti whether the group
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had a Web site, she answered: "It's really pathetic. Don't bother." About the
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only thing a Republican moderate is likely to get worked up about these days is
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the Christian right, whose existence led to the 1992 creation of the Republican
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Leadership Council, co-chaired by financier Henry Kravis. The group is housed
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in a shabby building on Capitol Hill a few doors down from the palatial
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headquarters of the Heritage Foundation. The elevator groans, and brown paint
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peels from the window frames. The RLC's purpose seems to be precisely in tune
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with that of the corporate titans who supposedly rule the party: Get government
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out of the bedrooms and concentrate on lowering taxes. Yet the group's budget
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is dwarfed by that of Heritage, which rakes in corporate contributions while
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scattering its attention between economic and social issues.
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Moderate Republicans are giving America what it wants.
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Broadly speaking, they provided their party with its last two presidential
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nominees (George Bush and Bob Dole) and, according to early betting, will serve
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up the next one (George W. Bush). Yet even as their votes in Congress are
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courted this week by Republican leaders and the White House, their ranks seem
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in no danger of expanding. For all their good manners, common sense, and
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solicitude toward voters, they just don't command much respect.
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