Chattanooga Times Free Press

DOUBLE STANDARD ON CULTURE-WAR CONTROVERS­IES

-

When Vice President Mike Pence was the governor of Indiana, he got along well with the mayor of South Bend, Pete Buttigieg, despite the fact that Buttigieg is a gay, liberal Democrat and Pence is a straight, socially conservati­ve Republican.

Things have changed since 2016: Pence became the vice president, and Buttigieg decided in April to run for the Democratic presidenti­al nomination. Suddenly there was bad blood where there used to be mad love. Buttigieg insinuated that Pence had a problem with Buttigieg’s sexual orientatio­n and marriage to another man.

“If me being gay was a choice, it was a choice that was made far, far above my pay grade,” Buttigieg said at an event for the LGBQ Victory Fund. “And that’s the thing I wish the Mike Pences of the world would understand — that if you’ve got a problem with who I am, your problem is not with me. Your quarrel, sir, is with my creator.”

The controvers­y had a bit of a high school feel to it in that Pence initially objected (correctly) that Buttigieg was being unfair to him given that they had once gotten along swimmingly. But Pence played the victim card too.

“He said some things that are critical of my Christian faith and about me personally, and he knows better,” Pence complained.

In a sense it was a win-win for both politician­s, given their very different constituen­cies. Each got to play the martyr for his own side.

And there was a third winner: the media. Buttigieg’s dunking on Pence was great fun for the mainstream press, which loves Buttigieg almost as much as it hates Pence. It was a neat and tidy morality tale pitting the forces of tolerance and equality against the forces of bigotry and oppression — Buttigieg the gay scholar veteran vs. Pence the would-be ruler of the Republic of Gilead (the fictional dystopia in “The Handmaid’s Tale”).

This is all old news, of course. But it seems newly relevant given that Buttigieg has a new problem with Christians who object to his lifestyle. But it’s a very different problem.

During Buttigieg’s recent appearance on NBC’s “Meet the Press,” host Chuck Todd read him a statement from the Rev. Rodric Reid, an African American pastor in Indianapol­is.

“I guarantee,” Reid had told the Indianapol­is Star, that Buttigieg’s marriage to another man “is going to be an obstacle … That is really still a touchy subject, specifical­ly and especially in the African American church.”

Todd also noted that he’d talked to black congressme­n who said Buttigieg’s homosexual­ity could be a problem with segments of the African American vote.

Buttigieg’s answers were respectful, thoughtful and hopeful that he could work it out with black Democratic voters.

But the question remains: Why don’t those voters get called bigots?

It’s a rhetorical question, of course. We know why. Attacking Pence and the people he supposedly represents is good for fundraisin­g and votes in Democratic primaries. Calling religious black voters bigots for having the same misgivings that some religious white voters have is political suicide.

The point here isn’t really about homosexual­ity or gay marriage — both settled issues legally and almost certainly politicall­y. Nor do I really care about the hypocrisy of it all, as much as it may annoy me.

The way the media tends to handle culture-war controvers­ies is deeply pernicious. As I write this, we’re nearly a week into a debate about whether detention centers are “concentrat­ion camps.” Wherever you come down on this semantic row, the fact is that the media would never have entertaine­d this “debate” under Barack Obama. We know this because he had detention centers as well.

Similarly, some Democrats are attacking Joe Biden for having had collegial relationsh­ips with segregatio­nist senators. That’s fair game. But if this debate were going on in the GOP, the media coverage wouldn’t be the riot of nuance we see before us. It would be simple and straightfo­rward: Racist racists act racistly.

But if you want to know why millions of Republican­s no longer care when the media shouts “Racist!” or “Bigot!” … just look at how they whisper “It’s complicate­d” when talking about Democrats.

 ??  ?? Jonah Goldberg
Jonah Goldberg

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States