The Mercury News

Apology for quip shows politics still can be civil

- By Mark Z. Barabak Mark Z. Barabak is a Los Angeles Times columnist. ©2024 Los Angeles Times. Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency.

Asa Hutchinson was never going to be the 2024 Republican presidenti­al nominee, much less the nation's 47th president.

In another time, before Donald Trump became the blob that swallowed the Republican Party, the former Arkansas governor would have been, at the least, a serious factor in the contest.

His experience — as a Reagan-appointed U.S. attorney, former House member, highlevel member of the George W. Bush administra­tion — was the sort of check-the-box ascent that marked the resumes of many successful presidenti­al contenders. Hutchinson even acted as a congressio­nal prosecutor in President Clinton's impeachmen­t trial, burnishing his bona fides as a partisan combatant.

What's striking is not the predictabl­e failure of Hutchinson's campaign, which ended last week after he finished lightyears behind Trump in the Iowa caucuses. Rather, it was the response from the Democratic National Committee.

“This news comes as a shock to those of us who could've sworn he had already dropped out,” DNC Press Secretary Sarafina Chitika said in a statement dripping with snark and condescens­ion.

Even more striking was the response that followed the mean-spirited takedown. A presidenti­al apology. “The president knows (Hutchinson) to be a man of principle who cares about the country and has a strong record of public service,” White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre told reporters. Chief of Staff Jeff Zients had called the ex-governor “to convey this and apologized for the statement that did not represent the president's views,” Jean-Pierre said.

Courageous campaign

Other Democrats weighed in as well.

“It's disrespect­ful, it's meanspirit­ed, it's unnecessar­y, and it's obnoxious,” said Minnesota Rep. Dean Phillips, who's waging an insurgent campaign to wrest the Democratic nomination from Biden.

Hutchinson was grateful for the presidenti­al apology. “It meant a lot to me,” he told CNN.

It was also a rare moment of grace in today's sludge- and sewage-filled political environmen­t. You don't have to love thine opposition. But you also don't have to be a jerk.

What distinguis­hed Hutchinson in his much-overlooked campaign was his willingnes­s to loudly and repeatedly call out the menace Trump poses to the country and its 247-year-long experiment with representa­tive democracy. Hutchinson showed the courage of his conviction­s by making his case even before hostile audiences.

“While some will ignore the destructiv­e behavior of the former president,” he said over boos and catcalls at a conservati­ve conference in Florida, “I assure you we ignore it at our own peril.”

Notably, at a debate in August, Hutchinson and former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie were the only two of eight Republican­s who said they would not support Trump's return to the White House if he is convicted of criminal charges. (Christie, Trump's other main antagonist in the GOP field, quit the race less than a week before the caucuses.)

That radical notion — that our next president shouldn't have a rap sheet — made Hutchinson a pariah in today's GOP, which seems to have traded its traditiona­l reverence for law and order for a more pliable moral relativism. (Sure, shredding the Constituti­on is suboptimal, but at least interest rates were lower when Trump was in office!)

Missed opportunit­y

Hutchinson “is a guy … with all kinds of qualificat­ions” who “ran a completely honorable campaign,” said Norman Ornstein, an emeritus scholar at the American Enterprise Institute, who has spent decades observing presidenti­al politics. “But the larger point here is that in this cult, there is no way somebody attacking the cult leader can prevail.”

If nothing else, Ornstein suggested, basic decency argued for a more cordial response to Hutchinson's inevitable exit from the race: “Why kick a guy when he's down?”

But he believes Democrats also missed a political opportunit­y and instead should have said: “`Thank you, Asa Hutchinson, for being honest and taking on a narcissist­ic sociopath, an autocrat, an insurrecti­onist and sexual offender.'”

As you might expect, there have been calls for Chitika to be fired from the DNC. But that seems unduly harsh. Washington is aswarm with an army of young, eager and ambitious staffers who possess more in the way of swagger and attitude than good sense. Many grow up and out of it.

Better to treat the occasion as one of those teachable moments and appreciate the presidenti­al act of crossparty kindness for the rarity that it is.

“You fight hard, but at the end of the day you want to make sure you treat each other with respect,” said Hutchinson, who suggested Biden's unbidden apology reflected “the good parts of American politics.”

Those good parts exist. You just have to squint hard these days to see them.

 ?? CHARLIE NEIBERGALL/ASSSOCIATE­D PRESS ?? Republican presidenti­al candidate Asa Hutchinson leaves an Iowa event. Hutchinson exited the race Jan. 16after repeatedly setting himself apart from Trump during his campaign.
CHARLIE NEIBERGALL/ASSSOCIATE­D PRESS Republican presidenti­al candidate Asa Hutchinson leaves an Iowa event. Hutchinson exited the race Jan. 16after repeatedly setting himself apart from Trump during his campaign.

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