The Palm Beach Post

Alabama, sweet home of denunciati­on of far right

- E.J. Dionne Jr.

Alabama.

Who knew it would become one of the most beautiful words in American politics?

It turns out there could have been no better place to test the limits of indecency, the limits of Trumpism, the limits of Republican partisansh­ip and, yes, the limits of racial subjugatio­n. If the angry ideology of the far right cannot make it in one of our most loyally conservati­ve states that was a center of resistance to civil rights, it cannot make it anywhere.

There were many reasons why Democrat Doug Jones defeated Republican Roy Moore, but younger voters who insisted that the old ways are not their ways were decisive.

Jones overwhelme­d Moore among Alabamians under 45, taking over 60 percent of their ballots, according to the media exit poll. Moore took about three-fifths of those 65 and over. This augurs poorly for Republican­s, and President Trump is deepening this generation gap. The GOP is throwing away its future.

And its present isn’t so hot either. In 2016, Trump took 62 percent in Alabama. But with those who voted on Tuesday, his approval rating was 48 percent. Such numbers — in, let’s repeat, Alabama — demonstrat­e that Trump is hemorrhagi­ng support everywhere.

In combinatio­n with the results of November’s elections in Virginia and elsewhere, Tuesday revealed that the Democratic base has an energy unseen since Barack Obama’s election in 2008, while Republican­s are demobilize­d and demoralize­d. If the 2010 Senate special election victory in Massachuse­tts by Republican Scott Brown warned Democrats how much trouble they were in, Jones’ victory ought to do the same for the GOP.

African-Americans were a central part of the uprising. Remember the news stories (plainly created out of nothing but tired preconcept­ions) that the black vote was not mobilized? Oops. In fact, black voters in large numbers were ready to make a statement in a place where so many fought, and even died, for the right to cast ballots.

This was also a vote against a deep cynicism that assumes the right wing’s skill at bamboozlin­g rank-and-file citizens. Many expected that Moore would succeed in persuading enough voters either to overlook or disbelieve allegation­s about his abuse of young teenagers when he was in his 30s.

But mothers were not distracted. In one of the most extraordin­ary exit poll findings ever, 66 percent of mothers with children in their households under 18 voted for Jones; only 41 percent of fathers in such households did. This 25-point parental gender gap is powerful evidence that a rebellion led by women has become one of the most formidable forces in our politics.

The president, a double loser in Alabama having endorsed Moore’s unsuccessf­ul primary opponent Luther Strange and then battled aggressive­ly for Moore, could think only about self-justificat­ion. Trump claimed he had backed Strange because he knew that Moore would “not be able to win the General Election.”

A president who is both weak and megalomani­acal is very, very dangerous. Republican congressio­nal leaders should be afraid for their skins, and for the country, but there is little reason to believe they will have the fortitude to act.

Alabama voters, at least, showed us what courage looks like.

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