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Right-wing US senator quits Republicans, to run for president
as independent
By Walter Gilberti
15 July 1999
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this version to print
Senator Robert C. Smith (R-N.H.) announced Tuesday that he
was quitting the Republican Party and would continue his presidential
campaign as an independent candidate. In an hour-long speech on
the Senate floor he denounced the Republican Party as insufficiently
right-wing on issues like gun control, abortion, foreign policy
and taxes.
A realtor and former high school coach, Smith has long been
identified as one of the most hidebound reactionaries on Capitol
Hill. He is expected to seek the nomination of the far-right US
Taxpayers Party, which has ballot status in a handful of states,
and to have his name placed on the ballot as an independent in
other states.
The defection of the New Hampshire senator is an expression
of the growing crisis within the Republican Party. A large section
of the Christian fundamentalists and other far-right elements
who have become the main political base of the party are in rebellion
over the attempt by the party establishment to back Texas Governor
George W. Bush for the presidential nomination.
Smith has criticized both Bush and the Republican congressional
leadership as too soft on the social issues espoused by the extreme
right. In his Senate speech, Smith declared that Republican opposition
to gun control and abortion is a fraud and everyone knows
it. He complained of the lack of alternatives in American
politics, saying, There's one party made up of Democrats
and moderate Republicans, and the conservatives are locked inside.
National Republican Party leaders are worried that Smith's
decision might prompt other disaffected Republicans to bolt the
party and support third party or independent candidates. The past
year has seen a trickle of defections from the Republicans to
the US Taxpayers Party, including Grover Coors, a grandson of
the brewing billionaire, and Ellen Caswell, who was defeated in
1996 when she ran as the Republican nominee for governor of Washington
state.
Some Republican officials called for candidates to sign a loyalty
oath pledging that they would reject all proposals that they run
as third party candidates. According to Stephen Duprey, the party's
chairman in New Hampshire: If you're going to run in our
primary, seek our party's nomination and use our party's resources,
then you owe us your support and loyalty for the nomination of
our choice. I have no tolerance for people who run in our primary
and then leave.
The initial reaction of Republican Senate leader Trent Lott
was to suggest that Smith be stripped of his membership in the
Republican caucus and his positions on Senate committees. But
Lott backed away from such threats after several prominent far-right
Republicans came to Smith's defense, a warning sign that other,
more visible representatives of the extreme right, such as Patrick
Buchanan and Gary Bauer, might also leave.
Buchanan issued a statement declaring: When a man as
conservative and principled as Bob Smith walks away from the Republican
Party, perhaps the problem is not with Senator Smith but with
the Republican establishment. Millionaire publisher Steve
Forbes, another Republican presidential hopeful, said, It's
a bad omen for the GOP when a solid Reagan conservative like Bob
Smith would even consider leaving.
While Smith had been a minor presidential candidate, with no
hope of winning the nomination, he is not an insignificant figure
in the Republican Party. He is currently chairman of the Senate
Ethics Committee, and is the prospective chairman of the Senate
Environment Committee. He also authored the amendment banning
partial birth abortions, and was one of three senators
to vote against the nomination of Ruth Bader Ginsburg to the Supreme
Court.
The US Taxpayers Party is one of several of the extremist and
semi-fascist parties that exist on the periphery of the Republican
Party. The USTP is particularly aware of the ongoing crisis in
the Republican Party, and is seeking to attract disgruntled party
members who believe the party has moved too far to the left.
Senator Smith shares this view. He is one of a number of leading
Republicans with close ties to the right-wing Christian Coalition.
Smith addressed a Christian Coalition convention in 1998, where
he declared that no financial support should be given to any candidate
that supports abortion.
In his address before the Christian Coalition, Smith said he
considered the Bible as an American document to be placed alongside
the Constitution and the Declaration of Independence (but made
no mention of the Bill of Rights). He is opposed to federal aid
to education and supports anti-union Right to Work
legislation.
Like Buchanan, Smith is an extreme nationalist who opposes
any US military actions under the auspices of the United Nations.
He is an advocate of what the USTP, in its platform, calls national
sovereignty, in opposition to US participation in international
organizations and treaties, as the international conventions on
human rights, which might subject US social conditions to international
scrutiny.
See Also:
In US presidential campaign: big money
backs Bush, Gore and Bradley
[12 July 1999]
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