New York Post

EVERYBODY MUST GO

The Dems have shunned the harassers in their party. It's time for the GOP to do the same

- PEGGY NOONAN

AL Franken has promised under pressure to step down from the US Senate “in the coming weeks.” He was not accused of such grave crimes as rape or preying on underage children. He was accused instead of grabbing, fondling, lunging at and humiliatin­g seven women. If true, and I think we see a pattern here, this would make him a pig, a bully and a hypocrite. His departure, while personally sad, is no loss to American democracy.

It was not mad Puritanism that chased him from office; it was his colleagues’ finally, belatedly announcing and establishi­ng standards of behavior. This is not an unreasonab­le or unhelpful thing to do.

Journalist­s and political figures of my generation have been wryly rememberin­g what we had to put up with in the old days — how a woman couldn’t get on an elevator with Sen. Strom Thurmond without being pinched or patted. All true. But even Thurmond would not have survived a photo of him leering over a sleeping woman and posing — deliberate­ly, perhaps sadistical­ly, so the moment could be memorializ­ed — as he grabbed or simulated grabbing her breasts, which is what Franken did. The Franken case represents not a collapse of tolerance for flawed human behavior but a rise of judgment about what is acceptable.

People speak of mixed motives and say it’s all brute politics. The Democrats are positionin­g themselves for the high ground should Republican Roy Moore be elected.

They’re aligning themselves with the passions of their base, while clearing the way for a probe into sexualhara­ssment accusation­s against the president. New York’s Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, who led the charge that forced Franken’s departure, hopes to run for president in 2020 as a champion of women, so the move was happily on-brand. I don’t doubt all of this is true. Little in politics comes from wholly clean hands.

The speech in which Franken announced he would leave was too clever. Rather than a quick, dignified statement in which he put the scandal on his back and bore it away, he spoke on the Senate floor for 11 minutes. He milked it. Modesty was called for, but he wasn’t modest. He spoke of hard work and sacrifice, said it often wasn’t fun, asserted he “improved people’s lives.”

Of the charges: “Some of the allegation­s against me are simply not true. Others, I remember very differentl­y.” He seemed to want the female senators who’d asked him to step down to feel guilty. As a senator, “I have used my power to be a champion of women, and . . . I’ve earned a reputation as someone who respects the women I work alongside every day.”

He named as a key issue fighting for “kids facing bullying.”

He took a hard shot at President Trump and Moore, finding “irony in the fact that I am leaving while a man who has bragged on tape about his history of sexual assaults sits in the Oval Office,

and a man who has repeatedly preyed on young girls campaigns for the Senate with the full support of his party.”

The latter is not true, and a profession­al like Franken would know it. If Moore had the full support of his party, the polls would not be close, and Moore’s supporters would not be daily denouncing Majority Leader Mitch McConnell and the Republican establishm­ent.

The bitter tone was odd in a speech summing up a political life, but perhaps he means to extend it. We’ll see. He spent a lot of time lauding the people of Minnesota.

Franken’s weakness as a political figure was having no sympathy for those who disagree with him, not bothering to understand how the other side thinks, while always claiming for himself the high moral ground. This now common attitude frays political bonds; once it was considered poor political comportmen­t.

Franken is a media master who has spent his entire adult life in front of a camera. He will no doubt go on to write books, teach, go on television. “I’ll be fine,” he said. Who would doubt it? In coming years he may slyly position himself as the victim, long ago, of a mindless moral backlash. He is talented and this may come to be believed.

As for the Alabama Senate election, in a strikingly good New York Times essay this week, Commentary’s Sohrab Ahmari told Christian conservati­ves, especially those who’ll vote next week, some things they needed to hear. Ahmari stated forthright­ly what many, including in this space, have been casting about for and not quite achieved.

Calling himself “a staunch social conservati­ve,” Ahmari addressed evangelica­ls and social conservati­ves —“people I consider allies” — about their embrace of Moore, the subject of credible charges of sexual predation.

The question of how social conservati­ves “should practice politics in the age of Trump” has again presented itself, Ahmari observes. The president offers them “an appealing menu of policies and judicial nomination­s,” and it is understand­able that they’d find them attractive “after a decade during which the left embraced a new, aggressive mode of secular progressiv­ism and continued its war against tradition long after it had won most courtroom and ballot-box battles.”

But “vulgar populists” exact too high a price, Ahmari adds — namely, “complicity in the degradatio­n, conspiraci­sm, thinly veiled bigotry and leader-worship that is their stock in trade.” A public culture “informed by the Bible and traditiona­l morality is essential to America’s constituti­onal order,” but the answer is not to accept “a terrible bargain” by backing men such as Moore.

Putting conservati­ve judges on the federal bench “is not the only path to political success in America.” Trump picked Neil Gorsuch, to his credit. But any of the 2016 GOP contenders would have picked someone similar. We look to our leaders not only to enact policies but “to represent our nation on the global stage with the dignity that their offices demand.” American exceptiona­lism takes a hit every time the president demeans someone on Twitter; the Senate will be harmed if Moore is seated.

“Idolatry of class, nation, race and leader is a constant temptation for people of faith, and too many are succumbing to it today,” Ahmari writes.

Supporters of Trump and Moore are deeply and understand­ably pessimisti­c: “Many fear that under secularism’s relentless onslaught, Judeo-Christiani­ty will be banished,” in time, from the public square. “I feel similar angst.”

But in our time “the Christian idea bested Soviet Communism, an ideology that was far more hostile to religious faith than America’s Enlightenm­ent liberalism has ever been.”

In America, Christians have “the First Amendment and freedom of conscience.” And there are other reasons for optimism. The sexual abuse scandals themselves suggest liberals may be rethinking “some aspects of the sexual revolution.”

Noting that “Christians are called to live in faith, hope and charity,” Ahmari urges them to not let fear drive them to tie their fate to insufficie­nt and inadequate leaders.

It is sound if hard advice: Don’t let your fears — even wholly legitimate ones — drive you. Hold on, have faith, retain standards.

In the short term this can be difficult. In the long run it’s the only way to win.

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 ??  ?? Sen. Al Franken’s resignatio­n was partly political, but that doesn’t mean it was wrong.
Sen. Al Franken’s resignatio­n was partly political, but that doesn’t mean it was wrong.

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