The New Zealand Herald

Roy Moore is a uniquely extreme politician — even in the

- Aaron Blake analysis

The US Republican Party is no stranger to extreme candidates. It has lost eminently winnable Senate races by picking unelectabl­e nominees in recent years.

It voted for the leader of the birther movement and a proponent of banning all Muslim immigratio­n as its 2016 presidenti­al nominee — who won.

But even against that backdrop, Roy Moore is in a class all by himself. It’s difficult to overstate how unpreceden­ted Moore’s nomination is even for today’s Republican Party. And it’s difficult to overstate how badly all of this could blow up in the GOP’s face.

It’s not just Moore’s extreme positions; it’s also the methods he’s been willing to employ and the religiosit­y — both literally and figurative­ly — that undergirds his entire political being. While other candidates have said controvers­ial things and espoused extreme positions, none were true-believers on par with Moore. This is a candidate who: Was removed from the state Supreme Court for refusing to obey binding rulings — twice — including most recently for refusing to obey the federal legalisati­on of same-sex marriage

Fomented the President Barack Obama-birth conspiracy theory (which, unlike President Donald Trump, he still hasn’t renounced)

Suggested Obama is a secret Muslim in a video released by his foundation

Said homosexual­ity should be illegal (but clarified that he doesn’t think gays should be killed)

Said as recently as this week that certain parts of America are under Sharia law Called Islam a “false religion” Said Muslim Representa­tive Keith Ellison of Minnesota shouldn’t be allowed in Congress

Suggested 9/11 was punishment for godlessnes­s in America, and said the same of shootings and killings

Denied custody of three children to a woman in a lesbian relationsh­ip, calling her lifestyle “an inherent evil against which children must be protected”

While other Republican­s have waded into areas that gave GOP leaders heartburn and made unnecessar­y mistakes as candidates — including bizarre theories about reproducti­on and rape — they often apologised or backed off in the name of getting elected.

And Trump, for all his extreme policies, is Roy Moore rarely bound by any discernibl­e ideology that can’t be altered at a moment’s notice. None of them ran as the kind of unapologet­ic crusader that Moore is. Moore has shown he’ll lose his job for the right cause, including disobeying court rulings that run afoul of his view of God’s role in the United States. There will be no controllin­g or prevailing upon Moore over the next two-and-a-half months before the special election or for the next few years if he joins the Senate; he is a bigger wild card than any of the names mentioned above. And the fact that he’s now the GOP nominee in a

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