The Commercial Appeal

GOP showing tolerable backbone

- DANA MILBANK Dana Milbank is a columnist for the Washington Post Writers Group.

WASHINGTON — As lawmakers put the finishing touches on an immigratio­n deal, veteran Rep. Don Young decided this would be a good time to come out with an immigratio­n plan of his own. His involves calling Latino immigrants “wetbacks.”

For Young, now in his 41st year in the House, Operation Wetback quickly became Operation Red Backside.

With commendabl­e speed, Republican leaders denounced the Alaskan for remarking in a radio interview last week that when he was a boy in California, his father “used to hire 50 to 60 wetbacks to pick tomatoes” on his farm.

Sen. John Cornyn of Texas, the No. 2 Republican in the Senate, fired off a statement saying that “slurs” such as Young’s “do nothing to elevate our party.”

House Speaker John Boehner of Ohio termed Young’s phrasing “offensive and beneath the dignity of the office he holds.”

As lashes kept coming — from Republican National Committee chairman Reince Priebus, Sen. John McCain of Arizona, House Majority Leader Eric Cantor of Virginia and others — the 79-yearold lawmaker issued not one but two apologies.

First, he said that he “meant no disrespect” in using “a term that was commonly used during my days growing up on a farm in central California” —

It’s not time to award any medals of courage. But there seems to be a growing if self-interested recognitio­n that intoleranc­e is doing the GOP, and conservati­sm, real damage.”

true, but unhelpful. When that didn’t suffice, he groveled: “I apologize for the insensitiv­e term I used. ... That word, and the negative attitudes that come with it, should be left in the 20th century.”

Republican leaders may wish that Young had been left in the 20th century. But their public anguish over his slur could be an encouragin­g sign: Are they finally willing to stand up to offensive elements in and around the party?

It’s not time to award any medals of courage. But there seems to be a growing if self-interested recognitio­n that intoleranc­e is doing the GOP, and conservati­sm, real damage.

As party leaders were flagellati­ng Young, a similar controvers­y bubbled up in Michigan, where state Republican National Committeem­an Dave Agema posted an article on Facebook condemning “filthy” homosexual­s for allegedly having higher rates of murder and disease.

But instead of ignoring the offense, a group of young Republican­s in Michigan blew the whistle on Agema and started a campaign to oust him from his post. Bobby Schostak, the state GOP chairman, issued a statement saying the party’s support for traditiona­l marriage “should never be allowed nor confused with any form of hate or discrimina­tion toward anyone.”

One county GOP chairman called Agema’s posts “disgusting,” and Priebus issued a statement to Time saying that “all human beings deserve to be treated with dignity and respect.”

It would be premature to say that the party of Todd Akin and Richard Mourdock has fundamenta­lly changed; conservati­ves appear likely to nominate Rep. Steve King of Iowa, an anti-immigratio­n hardliner and all-around bombthrowe­r, to be their GOP Senate candidate in Iowa next year.

But there are hopeful signs: Fox News Channel has dropped Sarah Palin, Bill O’Reilly criticized opponents of same-sex marriage as Bible-thumpers, and even the much-feared Rush Limbaugh has come in for criticism on the right. Conservati­ve commentato­r S.E. Cupp recently condemned Limbaugh’s “crazy and stupid and dan- gerous” attack last year on birth-control activist Sandra Fluke as a “slut,” and Republican former congressma­n Joe Scarboroug­h blamed Limbaugh and Fox News Channel for Republican­s’ poor electoral fortunes.

Admittedly, Cupp and Scarboroug­h work for MSNBC, but Limbaugh appears to be getting the message — in his own way. Two weeks ago, he misinterpr­eted new Beyoncé lyrics as sending a message that “she married the rich guy” and “now understand­s it’s worth it to bow down” to her husband. The next day, he told listeners: “The news is out that of course I’m back into my misinge — , well, misoge — , right, right, whatever it is.”

Misogyny. Limbaugh may not be able to pronounce it but, fortunatel­y, some fellow conservati­ves are now calling out those who pronounce on “sluts,” “wetbacks” and “filthy” gays.

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