Now contrast that with this article written back in the fall of 1998 by Bush's cousin, John Ellis in the Boston Globe. Note how the Rethugs feel over the Clinton impeachment and how they treated both their base and their office holders. Sigh!
REPUBLICANS WILL NEVER ACCEPT A DEAL FOR CLINTON
Boston Globe, Third, Sec. Op-Ed Page, p A1909-26-1998
By Globe Staff John Ellis
Here are four things the House of Representatives will never do. It will never agree to Senator John Kerry’s proposal that President Clinton testify before the Judiciary Committee in exchange for an expedited vote on impeachment. It will never agree to Harvard Law School professor Laurence Tribe’s suggestion that Clinton be reprimanded and the criminal case against him deferred until 2001. It will never agree to an ersatz plea-bargain arrangement. And it will never agree to censure.
Clinton will be impeached by the House. You can go to the bank on that. Thursday, House Judiciary chairman Henry Hyde said his committee would vote on a resolution of inquiry on Oct. 5 or 6. When that is approved, as surely it will be, the full House will vote on opening a formal impeachment inquiry.
The scope of that inquiry, according to House Speaker Newt Gingrich, will include the Starr report, the 1996 campaign finance scandals, and any and all matters currently under investigation by the Office of the Independent Counsel.
It is the opinion of the House Republican leadership that the perjury case against Clinton submitted by Starr is open and shut. The case for obstruction of justice and abuse of power is viewed as only slightly less convincing. But that’s not why the GOP-controlled House will inevitably vote to impeach the president. They will do so because Republican primary voters and caucus attenders—their core constituents—are insistent that Clinton be removed from office. The GOP electorate has not felt this strongly about an issue since Roe v. Wade on the issue of abortion, and this time everyone feels the same way. The impeachment of Clinton is a litmus-test issue. Republican legislators who get on the “wrong” side of it, as Senators Orrin Hatch and Trent Lott have in recent weeks by proffering a deal on censure, find themselves besieged by enraged constituents and angry partisans from across the country. The phone lines in their offices jam. The fax lines burn up. Their e-mail posts escalate in number and fairly teem with hostility. The political dynamics driving this issue are straightforward. The Republican Party is divided into three parts. The dominant wing of the party is composed of cultural conservatives whose principal issue is the country’s moral decline. Cultural conservatives represent 55 to 60 percent of the primary voters and caucus-attenders in Republican elections. They are religious, patriotic, and hyper-active in local and state politics. The second part of the GOP is made up of traditional Republicans.
They constitute roughly a third of the primary voters and caucus-attenders and rally to a less populist message. They believe in an internationalist foreign policy, a pro-business economic policy, and a more moderate stance on social issues. Above all, they believe in America’s mission and preeminence in the global community.
The third part of the GOP is made up of economic libertarians. This group was represented by Steve Forbes in the 1996 presidential primaries and comprises less than 10 percent of the total GOP voter base. What makes them important is that they are well-funded and egg-headed. Their daily bulletin board is The Wall Street Journal editorial page. They man the posts at the Heritage Foundation, the Cato Institute, and a hundred other foundations and periodicals. Small in number, their voice is broadcast across hundreds of megaphones.
All three parts of the Republican Party want Clinton out. The cultural conservatives view Clinton as the Antichrist. His removal from office is, for them, a moral issue. Traditional Republicans view Clinton as a cheese-ball, diminishing America in the eyes of the world. That begets instability, the antithesis of traditional Republican orthodoxy. Economic libertarians dislike Clinton because they think he’s corrupt. If he is driven out of office on sex, lies, and videotape, so be it. Any excuse will do. In recent years, there have been political debates where cultural conservatives stood in direct opposition to traditional Republicans and economic libertarians. The Mexican bailout was such an issue. Trade with China was another. Clinton was able to get Republican votes on both because the three moving parts of the Republican coalition were not in synch.
The problem for Clinton now is that the three moving parts are all working together toward his impeachment. Breathless reports in national newsmagazines and newspapers notwithstanding, no “wise men” can undo this dynamic. Bob Dole and Howard Baker cannot broker a deal in the Senate. They hold no brief from any of the constituencies. So the next time you see a story in the paper about a deal on censure, feel free to move right along. It will not happen in the House of Representatives, ever.