Los Angeles Times

Roy Moore gets a pass on all his other offenses

What’s really telling is what some national Republican­s consider beyond the pale and what they are implicitly shrugging off — racism.

- By Jamil Smith Jamil Smith is a contributi­ng writer to Opinion.

Trent Lott was the second-ranking Republican in the U.S. Senate in 2002 when his reputation tanked. His downfall began with remarks he made at a 100th birthday celebratio­n for Strom Thurmond, the former Dixiecrat senator from South Carolina whose 1948 presidenti­al platform was too racist even for 1948.

Lott, a Mississipp­ian, reportedly said at the event: “When Strom Thurmond ran for president, we voted for him. We’re proud of it. And if the rest of the country had followed our lead, we wouldn’t have had all these problems over the years, either.” He apologized and resigned his Senate leadership position about two weeks later. He left his seat in five years’ time.

If he’d known what his party would become, he might have stuck it out. Alabama Republican Roy Moore’s U.S. Senate campaign, which will end on Tuesday, one way or another, signals that the GOP isn’t pretending anymore on matters of race.

Race? You might have been expecting the word gender. But that’s the thing. What’s really telling about the Moore situation is not just that Alabama Republican­s have rallied behind him through thick and thin. It’s what the national Republican­s who’ve condemned one of their own have considered beyond the pale (sex assault accusation­s), versus what they’ve implicitly shrugged off as acceptable (racism).

Moore’s transparen­t bigotry is a matter of public record.

In September, a black man at a Florence, Ala., rally asked Moore the last time America was “great.” Moore replied, “I think it was great at the time when families were united — even though we had slavery — they cared for one another.”

In a 2011 radio interview, Moore said that striking all Constituti­onal amendments after the 10th — including those that guaranteed citizenshi­p to people who look like me and gave the vote to women — “would eliminate many problems.”

In 2006, Moore said Muslims should not be allowed to serve in Congress.

Some conservati­ves were outraged by those statements. Those conservati­ves did not, however, create an organized, official movement to keep Moore out of office. What set off the GOP leadership was that Moore has been accused of molesting a 14-year-old girl, attempting to rape a 17-year-old and pursuing several other teenagers romantical­ly, all while he was in his thirties.

I’m not trying to minimize Moore’s sexual offenses. They’re horrific. I’m merely pointing out that he’s not only an accused sexual assailant, but also a bigot — and the latter should have been enough to shame the GOP leadership into condemning or even abandoning Moore. It wasn’t.

President Trump got the same treatment during the 2016 campaign. He called Mexicans “rapists” and proposed a Muslim ban. Republican­s shook their heads. Only the “Access Hollywood” tape, in which Trump bragged that he’d sexually assaulted women, caused Republican elected officials to withdraw their endorsemen­ts en masse — temporaril­y.

Democrats follow Republican­s in focusing on sexual offenses above all others.

New Jersey Sen. Cory Booker is one of a few Democrats who, in recent days, has called for Trump to resign due to the credible allegation­s of sexual abuse against him. Fine. But what about the brutal immigratio­n enforcemen­t activities that he has instigated? The abandonmen­t of police reform efforts by his Justice Department? How about Trump’s history of housing discrimina­tion and racist remarks?

Admittedly, the fight for accountabi­lity is already an asymmetric­al one. Democrats seem insistent upon living up to character standards that Republican­s have no intention of meeting. It would be better, though, if Democrats were more consistent — if they did not wait to raise a fuss until a certain kind of disqualify­ing act took place.

Perhaps the late Democratic push for black votes will work, the voter suppressio­n will not, and Alabama will shock the world by electing Moore’s Democratic opponent, Doug Jones. But if Moore wins that vacant Senate seat, as most expect he will, he should take to the podium at his celebratio­n party and thank his lucky stars that times have changed since the days of Trent Lott.

The sex assault allegation­s almost did him in, but the racist comments were never much of a problem.

 ?? Brynn Anderson Associated Press ?? REPUBLICAN Senate candidate Roy Moore, shown at an early December rally, is expected to win in the special election in Alabama on Tuesday. If he does, it will be because his party no longer pretends to object to racism and bigotry.
Brynn Anderson Associated Press REPUBLICAN Senate candidate Roy Moore, shown at an early December rally, is expected to win in the special election in Alabama on Tuesday. If he does, it will be because his party no longer pretends to object to racism and bigotry.

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