More On Dierdre “Dede” Scozzafava
posted at 11:07 pm on October 26, 2009 by Dafydd ab Hugh
[ Congress ]
In the comments on a previous Big Lizards post, a commenter found my use of the term “GOP congressional establishment” puzzling; I noted that they were “the same folks who cynically picked (in a back-room deal) a out and out liberal, who agrees with Democrat Owens right down the ideological line, to replace the previous RINO [John] McHugh.”
The commenter wrote:
I’m getting quite tired of conservative Republicans talking about the Party as if they were somebody from the sinister mother ship….
That said, I can’t fault Newt for backing the Republican, apparently for good reason. It isn’t enough to stand on principle and lose, nor to forsake principle and win. If Hoffman can stand on principle and win, he’s pulled off the perfect storm. If he splits the conservative vote and the Democrat wins, he has harmed the cause, albeit temporarily.
Leave aside the confounding fact that I’m not a “conservative Republican;” I’m a free-market, pro-liberty Republican… but I hold many positions that run contrary to religious and social conservatism.
Let’s stick to the matter at hand. If we were talking about a moderate Republican with some doctrinal differences, I might be inclined to agree that party support is more important than picking nits. If we were talking about a fiscal conservative who was squishy on same-sex marriage, I would grit my teeth but still probably vote for him; he would be on our side fighting nearly all the elements of Obamunism.
But the candidate picked by the GOP nomenklatura, Dede Scozzafava, is neither of the above: She is a brazen liberal, on a par with the Maine twins, Olympia Snowe (R, 12%) and Susan Collins (R, 20%). Scozzafava was not chosen by the rank and file; there was no primary, no election, not even a caucus. How did she get the ballot slot?
State Assemblywoman Dede Scozzafava beat out a field of eight other Republicans on Wednesday to pick up the GOP endorsement for the 23rd Congressional District seat.
Scozzafava, R-Gouverneur, a moderate Republican who supports a woman’s right to choose and gay marriage, has been willing to openly split with her party in Albany.
The six-term Assembly member picked up the endorsement Wednesday after a meeting of the 11 Republican county committee chairs, who had interviewed the candidates at a series of regional meetings over the past month.
That, gentle readers, is the GOP congressional establishment, the Republican nomenklatura, in action: Who cares what Republican voters in the district want? I’ve got eleven party chairs in my pocket; and after interviewing the job applicants, they decided to hire Dede. And why Dede? Because, although she may be a social liberal, at least she’s a fiscal liberal as well?
Now party luminaries like Newt Gingrich are miffed that Republican and Conservative voters in New York-23rd, and even the rest of us elsewhere, dare to question why the loony liberal should be the GOP nominee. The nomenklatura demand that Doug Hoffman withdraw so that Scozzafava can have a clean shot; she is the default candidate, after all.
But it’s curious that the “default” is always to feverishly support anyone picked by the party establishment, even if the candidate is a flaming liberal; we joke that we’re the “party of orderly succession,” and that’s how we got Gerald Ford in 1976 and Blob Dole twenty years after.
But it never seems the default position for the party establishment — the party bosses who put Dede Scozzafava on the ballot on the basis of a job interview — to nominate someone who actually has the support and approval of the rank and file party members. They only care that she will play ball with them, or perhaps take orders, and above all else won’t rock the boat.
Doesn’t that seem odd to you?
Why didn’t they poll their party members? They had plenty of time: McHugh was tapped for Secretary of the Army on June 2nd — five months before the November 3rd election. That’s more than enough time to spend at least a couple of months finding out who the Republican (and Conservative) voters wanted as their candidate (under normal circumstances, the same person runs on both slates).
Instead, they just rushed to put a safely liberal DIABLO onto the ballot, pillow-talked Newt Gingrich into endorsing her; and now they expect the rest of us to cheer their quiet efficiency. We’re to link arms and support the liberal against the other liberal, presumably while singing Solidarity Forever. (“The union makes us strong!”)
I am really fuming about this: I am convinced that Dierdre Scozzafava is a vote for ObamaCare, a vote for Energy Cripple and Tax, a vote to pull all the troops out of Afghanistan… possibly even a vote for Nancy Pelosi (D-Haight-Ashbury, 100%) to return as Speaker of the House; look up Paul Horcher, Doris Allen, and Brian Setencich on Wikipedia.
It’s entirely possible that if Scozzafava turns out to be too liberal for her party in a year, she may turn her coat and, like Arlen Specter, run as a Democrat in 2010.
Take a look at her website. You have to search high and low to find even a single position statement; a paltry handful may be found here, shuffled in among such “publications” (press releases) as “Scozzafava Offers Praise for Outgoing Fort Drum Commander” and “Legislation Mirroring Scozzafava Bill Passes Assembly; Residents to Be Notified Of Sex Offenders.” But I can’t find anything on the momentus decisions that face the United States Congress.
I have a hard time believing she has no opinion; the most charitable conclusion is that she does have positions, but she doesn’t think revealing them would benefit her election chances.
Not only does Scozzafava seem indistinguishable from Bill Owens, the honest Democrat, she is an absolutely ghastly retail candidate: She’s a terrible speaker; she hasn’t reached out to hardly anyone in the district outside her liberal base; she seems to think that she has been anointed and will simply inherit the seat from the previous RINO, John McHugh (40% rating from the ACU — probably more than Scozzafava would earn).
It almost looks to me as if the RINO GOP in that district would rather lose with Scozzafava than win with Hoffman. It’s not that uncommon an attitude among an ensconced power elite; they’re liberal, she’s liberal, McHugh was liberal: If she wins, they’re still sitting pretty.
Even if she runs and loses (narrowly) to Owens, they still keep their power; they can argue Scozzafava lost because she wasn’t liberal enough!
But if, God forbid, Doug Hoffman wins… all the liberals in the permanent floating nominating and campaign committee in the 23rd District of New York could be ousted in favor of conservatives more to the new congressman’s liking; it’s not likely — they probably have more power than a mere freshman congressman; but if he stays and is reelected a few times, he could completely change the character of the Republican Party in that district.
The same dynamic beset the Democratic Party in 1984, when Gary Hart came very close to beating Sir Walter Mondale for the nomination; the only reason Mondale won was the Carter-Mondale axis rigged the game by three power plays:
- They forced a bunch of states to switch from primaries to caucuses, then the Mondale campaign took over the caucus structures… e.g., splitting the congressional and presidential nomination votes into two locations, then only telling Mondale supporters where the presidential one was to be held.
- The Mondale camp controlled the party establishment in the various states; so that even when Hart won a primary, Mondale still received the majority of the delegates from that state!
- And of course, through the very aggressive use of “superdelegates,” which had pretty much been invented eight years earlier by Jimmy Carter to steal the 1976 nomination away from Jerry Brown and Scoop Jackson.
That is the power the party establishment can yield, particularly over the nomination process; it’s made easier in the Scozzafava case by the circumstances: The nomenklatura simply met in a smoke-filled room and declared her the nominee.
Scozzafava is going to fade in the next week or so. The election will come down to Bill Owens versus Doug Hoffman, and Hoffman, I believe, will win. I wonder… when he does, will Republican leaders demand a recount?
Cross-posted to Big Lizards…









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Good point.
jhffmn on October 27, 2009 at 12:27 AM
Irrespective of all the other reasons that Scozzafava doesn’t belong in that race, there’s one that’s gone unnoticed. The woman has the political sense of a drunken turtle, and she’s stupid.
What kind of amateur tries to hold a panicked impromptu press conference in front of the opposition HQ?, gets drygulched by sign-waving volunteers, and fails to notice?
That’s getting into turtle-in-the-headlights territory. Anyone that blind and clueless has absolutely no business being in opposition in the here and now. Emmanuel and Axelturf will wear her as a charm bracelet and shake her to ward off opposition.
Dark Horse on October 27, 2009 at 12:31 AM
We need more people in this country who look at the current batch of candidates and reach the conclusion that they can do a better job of campaigning, and do a better job of representing the district than those who are on the ballot, and then do the research to get their own names on the ballots and in front of the voters.
Come on people. Sarah Palin started with the local school board. Doug Hoffman is starting with House of Representatives.
You can do this.
Me? Hah, I’m too ugly, smell bad, have a terrible temper.
Skandia Recluse on October 27, 2009 at 12:48 AM
Collins was campaigning for Dede last week.
Wethal on October 27, 2009 at 7:26 AM
When Gingrich chose his office squeeze over his country and gave Clinton a second term, he lost the right to speak for Republicans. He should shut up and commit seppuku.
erp on October 27, 2009 at 8:10 AM
What’s “DIABLO” mean? I’m guessing it starts “Democrat in all but…”
joe_doufu on October 27, 2009 at 5:33 PM
Democrat In All But Label Only.
cs89 on October 28, 2009 at 11:25 AM