StarTribune.com
Can anyone stand up to Limbaugh?
By TOM TEEPEN, Cox Newspapers
February 4, 2009
There's worry among Democrats that President Obama may have unwisely stirred a hornets' nest when he lightly gigged Rush Limbaugh, the radio gasbag who inveighs from the far right to millions of loyalists. Obama dared to suggest to Republicans that they might do better than turn to Limbaugh for the light to lead them from the darkness the last two elections have brought down around them.
This was hardly a vicious rip, but Limbaugh, as is his wont at even the lightest nick, howled as if armies had been sent against him and, true to their proud and unintentionally self-revealing label as Dittoheads, his listeners howled with him. Limbaugh talked himself into a froth over the next days and wound up declaring his ardent wish that the new president will fail. Rush, as he never ceases to remind us, is a great American.
In political circles, Limbaugh is accounted an 800-pound gorilla -- more or less literally -- who is better left alone to do his demagoguery unrebuked than confronted and thus provoked to spread the damage even more wildly. As a result, his daily spew of ridicule, mockery and distortion is the constant winner in a contest no one else has joined.
I wonder about that conventional wisdom. Limbaugh has always struck me as less a truly tough guy than a grown-up playground bully who is covering his inner crybaby with swagger and cowering behind a gang of followers who do his fighting for him. A recent victim in point: Phil Gingrey, a Georgia Republican congressman of indifferent distinction who, like Obama, wondered aloud whether Limbaugh was the sovereign remedy for Republican ills. Within a day, the Dittoheads had so swamped Gingrey with calumny and remonstration -- which is nasty, nasty stuff to be swamped with -- that he was begging to go on Limbaugh's show so as to prostrate himself before the great man in person.
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You have to wonder how well Limbaugh would hold up if someone -- someone who could command attention -- kept after him. Certainly not the president of the United States. But who else could -- ? Wait. The recount in Minnesota declared Al Franken the winner in that squeaker Senate race there. If the courts concur, the author of the 1996 best-seller "Rush Limbaugh Is a Big Fat Idiot and Other Observations" will be a player of note in Washington. Sen. Franken, your agenda awaits you.
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