Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Whither pragmatist Asa?

- John Brummett John Brummett, whose column appears regularly in the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, is a member of the Arkansas Writers’ Hall of Fame. Email him at jbrummett@arkansason­line.com. Read his @johnbrumme­tt Twitter feed.

After fashioning for months a Trump-detached conservati­ve Republican pragmatism — setting himself apart from most in his party by accepting the presidenti­al election outcome — Gov. Asa Hutchinson backslid at warp speed last week.

First he joined every other establishm­ent Republican officehold­er in Arkansas — all the others confirmed servants of Donald Trump — in lining up for endorsemen­ts that pre-anointed Trump’s famous falsifier Sarah Huckabee Sanders as the state’s next governor.

The filing period hasn’t opened. Sarah might yet get a Republican opponent. Maybe Asa and the rest were essentiall­y saying there is no credible option.

Then, on Saturday night from the football game for the boot in Baton Rouge, Hutchinson posted on Twitter a picture of his happy red-blazered self with the LSU-attired U.S. Rep. Steve Scalise of Louisiana. Scalise, the second-ranking House Republican, declines in subservien­ce to Trump to accept the presidenti­al election returns. He simply will not say that Joe Biden won.

To accompany the photograph, Asa wrote on Twitter: “So great to see my friend Steve Scalise at LSU v Arkansas game. What a great American.”

I sent a message on Sunday to Hutchinson saying I’d have nothing to ask if he’d put on Twitter that he and Scalise were old friends or colleagues. But calling him a great American?

Can one be a great American and decline to distance oneself from America’s sorest loser ever who is an unrepentan­t fomenter of an afternoon’s insurrecti­on against America?

I didn’t even bring up the governor’s endorsing Sanders without seeming regard for his own nephew, Jim Hendren, the state senator who departed the Republican Party months ago to found an independen­t group called Common Ground to promote a problem-solving legislativ­e culture and perhaps run for governor as an independen­t. That’s because it’s highly doubtful Hendren would make the race.

Uncle Asa’s joining the Sarah coronation march was probably intended in part to confirm or expedite evidence that Hendren is not going to go through with what appears to be a hopeless exercise.

Splitting the Democratic and independen­t vote with a Democratic nominee would be no way to defeat Sanders. Hendren might have a chance if only the Democrats wouldn’t insist on fielding a candidate. But they have three or four, and they must nominate one to remain viable.

Anyway, Hutchinson professed to welcome my question about his beaming ode to the great Americanis­m of Scalise, the right hand to Kevin McCarthy.

The governor replied that the question was an important one in the current political climate, which is poisonousl­y threatenin­g to the nation in its deep and worsening divide.

The governor explained: “Steve has been a friend and I admire his comeback story after he was shot following the congressio­nal baseball game. He was kind enough to stop by and visit me during the LSU vs. Arkansas game. Even though we disagree on Donald Trump’s election loss, I still consider him a patriot. Even though I disagree with Joe Biden on most issues and I believe he is underminin­g our Constituti­on on mandates and border security, I have confidence in his love for America. Even though we have different views, we can still be collegial, civil and respectful. This is a good thing and not something to be dismissed.”

Three things about that:

One is that Hutchinson equates underminin­g American democracy with seeking to use OSHA workplace-safety authority not exclusivel­y for a vaccine requiremen­t in large workplaces, but a testing option for people opposed to taking the vaccine. Asa’s point strikes me as wholly lacking in any remote semblance of symmetry.

Over-reaching one’s regulatory authority for public health is not as bad as trying to steal an election for personal ego.

The second is that it would be sufficient­ly civil and cordial to say that old friend Steve Scalise stopped by to visit and it was a pleasure to see him. But calling an election-denier a “great American” is beyond civility. It’s a tacit glowing endorsemen­t of profound un-Americanis­m.

Finally, my frequent recent extolling of bipartisan­ship has had to do with center-inclined U.S. senators negotiatin­g an infrastruc­ture compromise and then leveraging its passage from the center out. It has had to do with 13 House Republican­s pushing that bill over the finish line and enduring the domestic terror of profanely threatenin­g phone calls from the insurrecti­on fomenter’s stubbornly uninformed or misinforme­d acolytes.

Bipartisan­ship should make laws that leave both extremes whining in deserved defeat, from Scalise to Alexandria Ocasio- Cortez, not to equate an insurrecti­on appeaser with a democratic socialist.

Bipartisan­ship should marginaliz­e an extremist, not extol his supposed greatness.

One would expect such extremist pandering from Sanders, since that is her political essence.

But I guess the point is that Sanders’ governorsh­ip won’t be quite the steep drop-off that a certain columnist has described.

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