While there are a number of
fascinating peripheral questions here (who happened onto this? who forwarded it
to the Ouachita Citizen? why did this
happen three months after the incident’s recording?), the very central one is about
what impact this has on McAllister’s political future. Not long after the story
broke, McAllister issued a public
apology for this minor episode of infidelity to family, supporters, and
constituents, and whether this encourages somebody to run against him on the
basis that you have to get somebody in there who can resist the temptations of
Babylon remains to be seen.
To understand the effect on his political
career, it’s useful to compare the most consequential sex scandal in American
history, that of Pres. Bill Clinton,
and the most recent consequential (apparent) one in Louisiana, that of Sen. David Vitter. Clinton,
despite denials for months that launched a public investigation costing
taxpayers tens of millions of dollars, was demonstrated using physical evidence
to have engaged in extensive sexual activity with a White House intern. In
doing so, Clinton was held
in contempt by a federal court for lack of candor in his testimony, and he
later admitted to the special prosecutor in the case that he
knowingly given inaccurate answers under oath, which led to his
surrendering of his law license. He issued an apology
to the public, which he later acknowledged lacked needed contrition.
In Vitter’s instance, he admitted
commission of a “serious
sin,” believed to be having engaged services of prostitutes. His public apology,
coming years after the assumed last act, acknowledged responsibility and emphasized
a recognition of shortcoming and a declaration that action had been taken to
continue to avoid this sin. Unlike Clinton, these activities did not interfere with
his performance of duties in office, did not divert taxpayer funds to cover up
lying, and he never had legal charges brought against him. The obvious
difference is that Clinton, besides denying responsibility for months, abused
the powers of his office and the trust of the American people in relation to
his misdeed, while Vitter did neither.
McAllister’s fault appears on the
order of Vitter’s; the only significant difference being that this involved a
staffer on the taxpayer dime. Still, as long as her work output was legitimate
and wasn’t there solely for spurious reasons (which seems unlikely as she is
the spouse of a longtime friend of his; if he wanted only a plaything it would have
been a lot easier to find someone without whom he had a long acquaintance),
none of what McAllister has done here has betrayed the trust of his office.
(Regrettably, perhaps following Matthew
5:30, she was fired. (Note: since initial publishing, the original source now reports the staffer voluntarily resigned.)
As such, just as in Vitter’s
case, as long as the public accepts that McAllister gave in to human frailty to
which all are prone, believes him sincere in his regret and desire to change,
and that he shows every intention to avoid such behavior in the future, this
should not affect his long-term political career and short-term desire to win a
full term. That task might be more difficult because, unlike Vitter who had
many years to demonstrate a policy agenda much in congruence with the state’s majority
thereby giving him the benefit of the doubt, McAllister has been in office less
than half a year with almost no record. This makes it easier for an opponent to
claim McAllister is less serious about policy as he seems to spend time hitting
on the staff, but McAllister’s ability to argue convincingly this was a
deviation from the norm not to be repeated and has nothing to do with his
capacity to serve should mitigate the threat from that kind of challenge.
Of course, none of this will
matter to the hypocritical left that will condemn McAllister and declare him
unfit for office because of the long-standing double standard it takes in these
cases. Because McAllister came off as a “family values” candidate, it will howl
that he says one thing and does another, a line of thinking that betrays not
just an utter lack of logic, but also a perverse belief that a disordered moral
life leads to a pristine political persona.
In essence, the left gives a
freebie to those politicians, almost always liberals, who end up in these kinds
of affairs who do not make it part of their campaign and policy agenda the validating
of traditional moral values. By failing to align with a conservative social
agenda, if not outright opposing some aspects of it, it’s as if these
politicians, in the fever swamps of liberalism, inoculate themselves from
charges of behaving badly and are immune from any political consequences. In
other words, if you honestly set an admirable goal of moral personal (not
connected to politics) behavior, yet fall short, even if you have genuine
contrition you are to be condemned and declared unfit for political life. By
contrast, somebody who doesn’t do this behaves badly, and the left shrugs it
off as irrelevant to politics, even if that behavior subsequently affects the political
behavior of the transgressor.
But the point is, even by (most
of) the left’s definition, both agents engaged in bad personal behavior. So why
is it that the sincere one who aimed high and missed must exit political life
while the unconcerned one who didn’t try gets a pass? Such is the two-faced
approach many liberals will take on this issue, which shows neither logic nor
wisdom, as well as conveniently overlooks the fact that only McAllister’s
family and not the public where victims of betrayal. Indeed, far better it is
to have people in office who try to take a moral code, widely followed by the
American people, seriously that they would have supported in public policy than
those who don’t.
The coming months will reveal
whether a sufficient number of voters feel enough of a personal affront performed
by McAllister to threaten his political future. However, as this affair seemed
to have nothing to do with his performance in office, evaluating him primarily in
terms of his policy performance seems most wise and appropriate.
ReplyDeleteLiberals?
Here is a conservative Republican who believes that you CANNOT TRUST this guy who has UNDENIABLE TERRIBLE JUDGMENT.
Why would anyone want someone in high position with these traits?
If he has the values and morals he proclaims, he would give up his position
.
"Minor infidelity?" Is that like a "little bit pregnant?" Cover, cover cover for your buddies, Professor.
ReplyDelete"Because McAllister came off as a “family values” candidate, it will howl that he says one thing and does another, a line of thinking that betrays not just an utter lack of logic [...]"
ReplyDeleteHow does this betray an "utter lack of logic"? It's perfectly logical: a man who campaigns as being strong on conservative family values should obviously be willing to live up to it. That's "hypocritical" thinking? Perhaps in your mind only.
You seem unaware to admit that the charge to impeach Bill Clinton was strongly led by Newt Gingrich, who at the very same time was having his own extramarital affair with a young female staffer.
It is in no way "two-faced" to give a pass to someone who never claimed to be the arbiter of "family values" that makes a personal mistake while while condemning someone who claims to be Mr. Purity so quickly falls off the marital fidelity bandwagon. You're clearly pointing out hypocrisy where none exists, and very obviously making excuses for someone who so quickly violated the very principles he claimed to stand for.