Santa Fe New Mexican

No choice for many in Alabama race

- Bloomberg View Ramesh Ponnuru

For many voters in Alabama, the Senate election is more than an agonizing choice. It is an impossible one.

National attention has focused on half the dilemma. Republican candidate Roy Moore is credibly accused of having been a sexual predator, including against girls. His defenders, all too many of them pastors, have behaved disgracefu­lly: casting the victims as temptresse­s, excusing him on the basis of idle speculatio­n that other politician­s have been guilty of worse.

We have no reason to believe that the Democratic candidate, Doug Jones, is guilty of anything remotely as horrible. He appears to be a run-of-the-mill Democrat. His disqualifi­cations are different in kind. If you take seriously the view that abortion is the unjust taking of human life, as many Alabamians do, then Jones’ position on it is a nearly insuperabl­e barrier to voting for him.

Jones opposes legal protection for unborn children, even late in pregnancy (although he has tried to obfuscate his view). He gives every indication that in the Senate he would cast his votes on Supreme Court nomination­s so as to block states from being able to provide that protection.

If Republican voters disagreed with Jones merely on taxes or immigratio­n or the minimum wage, important as those issues are, it would be easier to overlook those disagreeme­nts and decide that Jones is preferable to Moore. As far as anti-abortionis­ts are concerned, though, Jones is wrong on our country’s premier human-rights issue.

It is because of Jones’ policy views, and especially his views on abortion, that many Republican­s who are revolted by news reports about Moore are neverthele­ss considerin­g voting for him. And it is because of evidence that Moore almost certainly serially abused young women that many Republican­s who oppose abortion are considerin­g voting for Jones.

From this perspectiv­e, the choice between Moore and Jones is a choice of evils. And those evils are incommensu­rable: They can’t be weighed against each other on a scale so that the lesser evil can be chosen.

The Alabama voter who seeks a candidate with anti-abortion views and at least average moral rectitude will find nobody on the Senate ballot who meets that descriptio­n. The political parties have failed that voter. But he still has the power to write a new name on the ballot, and he ought to exercise it.

It seems to be too late to organize a write-in candidacy with a real shot of winning the seat — especially since Moore continues, Lord help us, to have some obdurate supporters. But it remains possible to cast a vote that formally rejects both the options the parties have put forward. I would suggest writing in William Pryor, formerly the state’s attorney general and now a federal appeals court judge.

If you’re a voter in Alabama who can’t in good conscience vote for either of the party nominees, don’t try to overcome your conscience. One of these candidates is going to win the election, and your vote is infinitesi­mally likely to sway the outcome. Let that winner triumph without your endorsemen­t, and with your opposition registered. And let politician­s in both parties know that you have minimum standards that are not up for negotiatio­n.

Ramesh Ponnuru is a Bloomberg View columnist. He is a senior editor at National Review, visiting fellow at the American Enterprise Institute and contributo­r to CBS News.

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