Dede Scozzafava, Doug Hoffman, and the fight for Republican ‘purity’

What conservative infighting over a New York congressional seat says about the GOP's future

Thursday, October 22, 2009
Dede Scozzafava, Doug Hoffman, and the fight for Republican ‘purity’

New York State Assemblywoman Dede Scozzafava

(New York State Assembly)

Best opinion: New Republic, National Review, Atlantic, The Week

As David Frum writes in The Week's Bullpen, the Republican Party is mired in a bitter internal battle over an off-cycle congressional election in upstate New York. What should be "a cakewalk" for the Republicans now looks like a defeat as the party nominee, moderate Dede Scozzafava, loses supporters to Conservative Party candidate Douglas Hoffman. But this is about more than a single House seat, it’s about the ongoing debate within the GOP about how to reinvent the party. For Republicans, what is the choice on offer?

Purity vs. pragmatism: "It demonstrates just how right-wing some Republicans have become that former House Speaker Newt Gingrich is on the moderate side of this civil war," says E.J. Dionne Jr. in The New Republic. Gingrich's "old nemesis" Dick Armey and his fellow tea-party conservatives think ideological purity comes first. But "Gingrich, who backs Dede Scozzafava, always understood that he would never have become speaker without help from Republican moderates."
"Who is us?"

Fighting vs. surrender: Why the Republican machine picked Dede Scozzafava as its candidate "eludes us," said the editors of National Review. "It may be too generous even to say that Ms. Scozzafava is a RINO—Republican in Name Only—" as she's squarely with the liberals on abortion, gay marriage, and just about everything else. But GOP officials can at least redeem themselves by leaving Douglas Hoffman alone and directing their fire at the Democrat, Bill Owens.
"On the right, an upstate upstart"

Fantasy vs. reality: Doug Hoffmann "fulfills a fantasy" for the right-wing purists who believe the problem with Republicans is that they sacrifice principles for expediency, says Marc Ambinder in The Atlantic. This crowd thinks Republicans just have to "act like true conservatives" and they'll win. They'll get a cold dose of reality if Hoffman loses, "which is more likely than not." But Hoffman will have accomplished one thing—turning the race into "a referendum on the future of the Republican Party."
"Doug Hoffmann: The next (unlikely) conservative superstar"

Possible rebirth vs. permanent minority: Doug Hoffman’s insurgent campaign is almost certain to deliver victory to the Democrats, says David Frum in his column in The Week's Bullpen. Then what? "If the Republicans pick up an Arkansas Senate seat and a dozen blue-dog Democratic House seats in 2010, you can see this 'tea party' mentality taking strong hold of the GOP in the run-up to 2012." But that means writing off the suburbs, the Northeast, and California, which isn't a formula for a national Republican majority. "It's a formula for a more coherent, better mobilized, but perpetually minority party."
"Prelude to Republican fratricide"

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5 Comments

Posted by Solid Citizen, Friday, October 23, 2009, 6:22 pm I think many citizens would prefer a representative who will honor their oath uphold the Constitution and will not tax and spend them and their children into a Third World existence.A hipposhaped RINO is not the answerQuo warranto, B.O.?

Posted by Negenter, Monday, October 26, 2009, 11:13 pm We need a true conservative like Hoffman in there to challenge Obama. Hoffman won't be afraid to ask the tough questions like why has BO never shown a birth certificate? What is Obama hiding? Who is really controlling B. Hussein Obama? Hoffman's vote will be needed for impeachment and subsequent trials for treason of dems who knew the truth about Obama all along.

Posted by Roger, Saturday, October 31, 2009, 12:06 pm Why would we want a GOP majority if it were a liberalleaning party? There seems to be an assumption that we want a Republican majority at all costs, but that isn't the case for most people. The loyalty is and should be to principles, not party. Newt Gingrich wants to lead the Republicans to a majority, but if we did as he suggests, we wouldn't even recognize the party anymore, and certainly wouldn't feel compelled to support it. It seems that many in the GOP leadership still haven't taken to heart the lessons learned from their recent defeats.

Posted by Betty, Sunday, November 1, 2009, 6:06 pm To support a Democrat just shows what a weak spine Dede has. We really need a conservative Republican. Not someone who looks like a Democrat. Regardless of who wins, she is not electable. Hoffman is electable. Thank You.

Posted by Dan, Tuesday, November 3, 2009, 5:17 pm How is it that a candidate who does not live in the Congressional district can run for Congress? How does that work? I guess I don't understand.

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November 27, 2009

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