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The swoon that was: Fred Thompson and the “values” of the Republican Party

“Thompson’s fall from grace” was the headline of a post by my friend Steve Benen at Talking Points Memo. While Romney and Huckabee led the way at the religious right’s recent self-glorifying two-day “Values Voter Summit” in Washington, much to no one’s surprise, Thompson placed well back in fourth, a distant fourth, behind Romney and Huckabee, a close 1-2, and Paul, a decent third. Thompson finished ahead of Brownback, who has withdrawn from the race, as well as the two “why are they even running?” candidates, Hunter and Tancredo. Also to no one’s surprise, Giuliani and McCain ended up at the bottom of the pile.

In short, the fundies have spoken. And, well, they’re split.

I argued some time ago that Romney had a good shot at the nomination, that he could surge even after Thompson, the would-be Reaganite saviour of the GOP, entered the race. To me, these numbers speak volumes. Huckabee is still a long-shot, too much a long-shot, and Romney clearly has the support of a good chunk of the religious rightist vote. But can he overcome the staunch and determined opposition he faces from those on the right, and from within the GOP generally, who refuse to support a Mormon, or who just don’t trust him (what with his seemingly dubious religious rightist credentials), or who see him as an insincere, opportunistic flip-flopper on key religious rightist issues like abortion and gay marriage? He has a lot to overcome, to be sure, and there will continue to be doubters and critics no matter how well he does, but he is in the lead, more or less, and the rest of the field is, to put it nicely, uninspiring.

And that includes the saviour himself, Fred Thompson.

Thompson is still doing fairly well in the polls, if well short of those hyper-heightened pre-announcement expectation levels, running behind Giuliani, the current front-runner, but not too far behind. And he is doing well among churchgoers, a key (if not the key) Republican voting bloc. The problem is, he is not doing well among the activists, those who bothered to take the time to attend the values summit. Furthermore, there are lingering doubts as to his social conservatism, his commitment to religious rightist values. He may talk the talk, but so does Romney, and more aggressively, and so does Huckabee, who can back up the talk with a consistent walk, a more genuine commitment to those values.

Thompson still has time to get his act together, and much of it seems to be an act, a poor act, but, to me, he looks tired, dull, unmotivated, and, well, lifeless. He is no Ronald Reagan, not even a mediocre imitation, not even close. And still one wonders: Why is he running? What does he stand for? What is his vision? Does he have any vision at all? They may be uninspiring candidates, the lot of them, but at least Thompson’s rivals all seem to have a driving, meaningful purpose as presidential candidates: Giuliani and 9-11/terrorism, McCain and Iraq/national security, Huckabee and religious rightism, Romney and the Romney image, and so on. Thompson, for his part, seems to be without drive, without meaning, and without purpose. And Republicans, I suspect, have figured that out already. It didn’t take long.

That’s right, it didn’t take long for the bubble to burst, for the myth to be shattered, and many of us saw it coming. Thompson’s presumptive candidacy was such a joke, after all, way back before he entered the race. There was excitement and enthusiasm — among desperate Republicans, to be specific — but not for Thompson the man, the former lawyer and politician, but Thompson the actor, specifically for the Thompson characters on TV and in the movies. An admiral, a DA, a wise and authoritative tough guy, the same character over and over again — it was that character Republicans wanted to run, not the real-life Fred Thompson with the political past.

But what Republicans have now is the real-life Fred Thompson, and, whatever the poll numbers, he’s just not to their liking, not living up to expectations, because the expectations were unreal, because the characters are unreal, because “Fred Thompson,” as opposed to Fred Thompson, is a fiction. That fiction has fallen from grace, and the man along with it, the man wrapped up in the fiction, the man mistaken for the fiction. The race is not over, and the competition is light, but it is hard to imagine how this fiction-cum-folly will be able to pull out a victory in the real-life sweepstakes of Republican politics.

(Cross-posted from The Reaction.)



7 Responses to “The swoon that was: Fred Thompson and the “values” of the Republican Party”

  1. Elrod says:

    I agree with your assessment. I live in what should be Fred Thompson – East Tennessee. There are some folks out there with Fred ’08 stickers on their cars, but not much overall. The local media is irked that Fred spends no time working local voters. He only comes to Tennessee for money. He’d win the TN GOP primary easily, but he’d struggle in any other Southern primary. There’s just not much enthusiasm for here other than that he’s the local guy. And the lack of enthusiasm is not because people don’t like him, but that they don’t see why he’s really running. It’s quite a bit like another East Tennessean who ran for President – Lamar Alexander – who was (and is) well-liked but not enough to be elected President.

  2. DLS says:

    He appears to be a dud, all right.

    For readers’ information, the “social conservatives” are not limited to the Religious Right, whose members are so often the object of hatred and psychotic reactions by the Left (who are often far less mainstream than religious fundamentalists), but constitute a larger group. Readers who want to learn more should view this Pew report.

  3. casualobserver says:

    I see Barack Obama as sort of the Bradley/Dean/Babbitt/Tsongas of the 2008 election cycle. Whereas Hillary Clinton articulates definitive views, Obama meanders. Whereas Biden and Richardson seem to have transcended their state identities, Obama still seems like a guy from Illinois. Where has his fund-raising prowess gotten him……a lock on second place it seems. Not a good showing for a Messiah.

  4. [...] Clark The swoon that was: Fred Thompson and the “values” of the Republican Party » This Summary is from an article posted at The Moderate Voice » Domestic and international news [...]

  5. domajot says:

    “Obama still seems like a guy from Illinois. Where has his fund-raising prowess gotten him……a lock on second place it seems. Not a good showing for a Messiah.”

    …may say more about the nature of the electorate than the nature of the Mesiah.
    And yes, good guys often finish last – much to the detriment of all concerned.

  6. TIM says:

    FRED HAS NO DIRT IN HIS BACKGROUND AND THATS TREMENDOUS! HE IS A NO NONSENSE STRAIGHT FORWARD MAN! HE HAS THE LOOK, THE WALK AND THE TALK OF BUFORD PUSSER AND THE COMMUNICATION SKILLS OF RONALD REAGAN! WOW! WHAT A GREAT PRESIDENT! CHECK OUT http://WWW.THOMPSONDEPOT.COM

  7. domajot says:

    “HE HAS THE LOOK, THE WALK AND THE TALK OF BUFORD PUSSER AND THE COMMUNICATION SKILLS OF RONALD REAGAN! WOW! ”

    Wow, indeed!
    It looks like the Republicans want ot elect a walking, talking composite picture.

    No real people need agpply.

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