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 <A HREF="http://www.antiwar.com/justin/pf/p-j012400.html">Behind the
Headlines</A>
http://www.antiwar.com/justin/pf/p-j012400.html

Behind the Headlines
by Justin Raimondo
Antiwar.com
January 24, 2000

BUCHANAN-KEYES – A DREAM TICKET FOR CONSERVATIVES

For years, the Washington Establishment has been laughing at Alan Keyes: who
is this guy, they sneered, and why is he running for President? Now, it looks
like Keyes may have the last laugh.

BREAKTHROUGH
A former US ambassador to the UN Social and Economic Council, and Assistant
Secretary of State for International Organizations, the charismatic Keyes is
a spellbinding speaker whose ability to ratchet up the emotional and
intellectual level of Republican rally-goers is legendary. Besides running
for President in 1996, Keyes ran twice for the US Senate from his home state
of Maryland, and was a featured speaker at the 1992 Republican National
Convention. Newspaper reporters don’t know what to make of him, and so they
have been pretty much ignoring him – up until now. After years of
barnstorming the country, delivering good old fashioned stem-winders that
have even his critics up and applauding – and being politely but firmly
ignored by the Republican Establishment and the mass media – Keyes may be on
the verge of a major breakthrough. The vacuum left by Buchanan’s departure
from the GOP was soon filled by Keyes. Hard-right conservatives who count
themselves as GOP loyalists and like charisma in a candidate found themselves
in the Keyes camp, and this is beginning to show up in the polls: Keyes is
now ten percent and climbing in Iowa. This is up from second to last a few
weeks ago, just above Orrin Hatch, at two or three percent.

THE KEYES MOMENT
Much of this is due to Keyes’ stellar performance in the Republican debates,
in which polls reveal he managed to impress the majority of the TV audience
as the "most knowledgeable." Keyes would stand out in any company: Compared
to the dull disquisitions of the dweebish Forbes and Gary Bauer’s priggish
proclamations, however, Keyes’ eloquent oratory has made him the focus of
conservative protest, the voice of rightwing dissent in the GOP. Keyes, who
wrote his Harvard Ph.D. thesis on Alexander Hamilton and speaks six
languages, underscored the Smirk’s ignorance with his dazzling language and
mastery of the issues. The Keyes Moment is upon us – but how long will it
last? The answer may surprise us all.

NONE SO BLIND
The rise of a black conservative leader in the GOP is not something that
anyone expected – not the national media and especially not the GOP
Establishment that has spent so much time convincing itself it really does
believe in "diversity." With the Democrats launching a campaign designed to
paint the party of Abe Lincoln as the party of George Lincoln Rockwell, one
would think that the GOP establishment would have been quick to glom on to
Keyes, or a least engage him in some way. Instead, they have virtually
ignored him, concentrating all their fire and attention on the threat from
their left in the media-driven McCain insurgency. They do so at their peril.
. . .

KEYES ON KOSOVO
Keyes drew large crowds in Iowa, generating more excitement than all of the
other candidates put together, and igniting the enthusiasm of grassroots
conservatives. While his signature issue is abortion, Keyes is far from being
a single-issue candidate. The abolition of the income tax, which he likens to
slavery, gets just as much if not more attention. An avid critic of
globalism, he disdains the UN, and insists on the absolute primacy of
American sovereignty, and goes even further: he recently observed that the
bombing strategy against Yugoslavia was designed to create a NATO
protectorate in the Balkans, and the Kosovo war was "a war to establish a
not-yet-existent global government" using "a strategy that is morally evil."
As the Kosovo war was dragging to its unseemly end, Keyes declared in an
unforgettable piece for WorldNetDaily that:

"Whatever kind of "victory" Bill Clinton claims, I think that the rest of us
ought to hang our heads in shame. The NATO campaign has followed a strategy
that we know to be wrong and deeply immoral. The moral norms that as a decent
and civilized people we have worked to establish condemn a strategy that aims
to break and destroy the civilian people of a country in order to achieve
political objectives. The classic definition of terrorism is the use of force
against civilians in order to get them to do your bidding as a result of the
terror induced in their hearts. And we have been practicing a strategy based
on just such a use of force."

KEYES – A LIBERTARIAN?
Keyes has been characterized by the national media as a social conservative:
they cannot see past the references to God, and the revivalist tenor of his
rhetoric, to realize that the guy is a libertarian through and through. Of
course, the only people who get called "libertarian" these days are
left-libertarian flakes like Jesse Ventura, former Governor William Weld, and
Bill Maher. But Keyes is far more libertarian than any of these in the sense
that he loves liberty, and not licentiousness. His absolutist stance on
abortion is perfectly compatible with libertarian principles, granted the
premise of the anti-abortion movement that the fetus is the equivalent of a
living being.

KEYES ON BUCHANAN: A LIBERTARIAN CRITIQUE
During the 1996 campaign, faced with the difficult task of following Buchanan
in a candidates’ forum in New Hampshire, Keyes boldly challenged the audience
and Buchanan by making an argument that seems to me unanswerable. Pat has
just given one of his rip-roaring "culture war" speeches, and the audience
was really riled up against the secular elites. It would have been hard for
anyone to top that, but Keyes waded fearlessly into the fray: "Brace
yourselves," he said, as soon as he got up on the stage, "because this is the
part some of you won’t want to hear." Citing the history of America as the
bastion of religious tolerance, a refuge from Europe’s sectarian purges and
persecution, he lit into Buchanan:

"And if you understand that, then you understand something else. I follow to
this podium a man I greatly respect and admire. But also a man who I believe
is in the midst of committing what could be a fatal mistake for the moral
conservative cause. . . . We cannot stand before the American people, as I'm
afraid Pat Buchanan just did, and tell them that the great foundations of
American life are the Bible and the Constitution. He leaves something out. He
leaves out that great document which is the bridge between the Bible and the
Constitution. . . . That document is the Declaration of Independence. The
document that states the fundamental premises of this nation's life, and
which puts at the heart of our national identity not the existence of rights,
but the existence of God. And which puts it there, not as a matter of
Christian faith, not as a matter of Jewish faith, not as a matter of personal
faith, but as a matter of American faith: an American creed, an American
belief, that which unites us one and all on the common ground of principle
that makes us one nation, under God.

"But if we present our moral case leaving out that essential bridge, we will
not win, we will be defeated. We will not serve the cause of right, but we
could very well at this critical moment lead it to a defeat that will mean,
quite frankly, the end of our Republic. That is – that is – how profound
this moment is, how deep and serious is the moment you and I are facing."

A TACTICAL POINT
Keyes was beating a bit of a straw horse here, as I am sure that Buchanan
would disagree with none of this; nevertheless, Keyes made an important
tactical point perhaps overlooked by Buchanan at the time. In his critique of
the dangers of appearing to call for state intervention to impose morality
and religion on the pagan masses, Keyes was perhaps presaging Buchanan’s
later turn toward the more libertarian-oriented Reformers. Which raises an
intriguing point – will Keyes follow Buchanan into the Reform Party?

WHICH WAY FOR KEYES?
With rumors rife that the Smirk is about to anoint Elizabeth Dole or
Christine Todd Whitman to the Veep slot, the pro-life forces are getting
ready for a major assault on the party’s Eastern Establishment – and Alan
Keyes could be leading the charge. Coming out of Iowa with a strong showing,
and with a new visibility in the media, Keyes may become the locus of
rightwing dissent in the GOP, such as it is. The question is: will he show up
at the Smirk’s coronation, and bend his knee to the hereditary heir – or
will he issue his own declaration of independence, the announcement of his
break with the GOP?

THE DYNAMIC DUO
Ideologically, Keyes and Buchanan are so similar as to be virtually
indistinguishable on every issue, from Kosovo to gun control, from tax policy
to foreign policy and on down the line. They belong in the same party because
they are part of the same movement – the movement to restore our old Republic
and break the chains of the Welfare-Warfare State. They would make a truly
dynamic duo, a dream ticket for noninterventionist conservatives and other
critics of Clinton’s criminal assault on Yugoslavia. After the Bush people
humiliate the Keyes activists by shutting Keyes entirely out of any role at
the Republican convention, and as conservative shills for Bush like Tucker
Carlson sneer that "he’d make such a terrific civics lecturer," Keyes and his
grassroots supporters will feel increasingly alienated from the GOP. Will
they stay and fight for the soul of the party, or join Buchanan and his
brigades and find a new home in the house that Ross built?

A BIPARTISAN NIGHTMARE
A Buchanan-Keyes ticket: now that is the biggest nightmare of the Republican
Establishment – and the Democrats wouldn’t be too happy about it either. For
both would eat into constituencies previously monopolized by the "majors":
blacks, union members, the growing antiwar movement, as well as movement
conservatives previously wedded to the GOP. As the battle to be included in
the debates takes front and center, Keyes – who has plenty of experience in
dealing with debate organizers who exclude non-"mainstream" candidates – will
be a powerful voice raised against this undemocratic attempt to control the
process. This will give the Buchanan theme of malevolent elites more
resonance and bite: together Pat and Keyes would strike terror in the hearts
of the Establishment: both the left and the "respectable" right would tremble
at any prospect that these two could possibly be included in the debates.

WHICH ROAD?
Buchanan’s motivation in bolting the GOP and launching a third-party bid for
the White House is attacked by the Republicans and their journalistic
apologists as a case of sour grapes, of personal vanity, of hubris. But the
fact is that Buchanan was motivated simply by the conviction that no real
difference remained between the two major parties, and by the knowledge that
he could keep his campaign going and make sure that conservatives would have
some voice in the general election. The Keyes crusade is similarly motivated
to continue: Keyes has been campaigning, on and off, since he first ran for
Senate years ago, and is unlikely to stop now. He has built up a personal
following as well as a growing national audience, and after the GOP
convention they are going to want to know what road to take. As to whether
Keyes will have the courage to take that final step and break with the
liberal Republican Establishment once and for all is an open question – and
an interesting one to contemplate.




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