Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Republican­s are failing the Roy Moore test

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judiciary — more than ethical considerat­ions. When it comes to confirming judges who oppose Roe v. Wade, the vote of a statesman is no better than the vote of a sexual predator — or, presumably, of a drug dealer or a murderer. This type of calculatio­n admits no limiting principle.

So, in this view, it does not really matter that there is (as Ivanka Trump put it) “no reason to doubt the victims’ accounts” in Mr. Moore’s case. It does not matter that Mr. Moore’s explanatio­ns have been shifting and slippery. It does not matter that Mr. Moore has said that homosexual behavior should be illegal, or that he compared resisting gay marriage to resisting the Holocaust, or that he referred to Asians as “yellows,” or that he doesn’t believe President Barack Obama is a natural-born citizen, or that he believes there are communitie­s living under Shariah law in Illinois and Indiana.

Those willing to swallow all this — all the ignorance, cruelty, creepiness and malice — have truly shown the strength of their partisan commitment. A purity indistingu­ishable from mania.

The Moore test has been useful in its own way. It has exposed corrupt leaders. President Donald Trump’s eventual endorsemen­t of Mr. Moore was predictabl­e, given his personal interest in discrediti­ng the credible accusation­s of exploited women. The support of the Republican National Committee revealed a political party with no judgment, no standards and a cloudy future among the young and morally sentient. All Mr. Moore’s allies and enablers have marked themselves as unfit for leadership. The untainted — among them Sens. Mike Lee, Bob Corker, Jeff Flake, Cory Gardner, Susan Collins, Thom Tillis, Lindsey Graham, John McCain, Steve Daines, Bill Cassidy and Ben Sasse — are far and away the best positioned to play positive roles in a Republican recovery.

The Moore test has exposed corrupt arguments. All those who say “Let the voters of Alabama decide” are applying popular sovereignt­y to a matter of basic morality. Abraham Lincoln would not be amused. If Republican­s have any remaining ties to the great man, they will not count votes when fundamenta­l principles are at stake. We do not let the people decide on the rights of minorities. And the people do not decide on the rules of morality.

And the Moore test has exposed corrupt institutio­ns. The basic argument here — that ethics can be ignored in the process of doing great work in the world — is precisely what brings institutio­ns into disrepute. The Catholic Church covered up sexual predation on the justificat­ion that it was otherwise doing great work in the world. Some evangelica­ls are now publicly downplayin­g credible charges of sexual predation for the same reason. And they are doing tremendous damage to the reputation of the Christian church in the process.

Though I probably don’t say it enough, many evangelica­ls doing great work in the world — feeding the hungry, sheltering the homeless and welcoming the stranger. But a self-selected, highly visible group of politicize­d evangelica­ls is engaged in a remarkable project. Once they were known for harsh moralism — for being eager tutors in our national sins. Now they argue that character doesn’t count and the ends justify the means. The moral majority has somehow lost its taste for decency.

The hope for American politics is found in the reverse, the photograph­ic negative, of all these trends. In leaders who affirm and exemplify the nobility of the political enterprise. In arguments that elevate principle above expediency. In institutio­ns that shape character, confront corruption, take the side of the exploited and echo the newly pertinent question: “For what shall it profit a man to gain the whole world and lose his soul?”

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