Why Fred? The Perfect vs. The Good

As I posted Monday night, the National Right to Life Committee’s endorsement of Fred Thompson was disappointing to me. However, it was not unexpected and it certainly was not a betrayal of pro-life values (unlike Pat Robertson endorsing Guiliani). At the end of that post (”NRLC to Endorse Fred Thompson“), I recommended that individuals who are similarly disappointed read Dr. Wanda Franz’s article, “When Common Sense is Lacking“.

Unless you have been for Fred since the beginning, I think the question in every pro-lifer’s mind right now is: “Why Fred?” Why not Duncan Hunter? Why not Mike Huckabee? Why not Mitt Romney, John McCain, Ron Paul? Excluding Romney, it is arguable that each of those candidates has a solid pro-life record that easily outshines Fred Thompson. Fred Thompson has made some questionable statements in the past regarding abortion and more recently regarding Terri Schiavo. Why would the nation’s leading, most respected pro-life lobbying organization throw their hat in the ring for Fred, of all people?

I think it is most useful to look at Dr. Wanda Franz’s statement to the press:

National Right to Life, the nation’s largest pro-life organization, representing pro-lifers in fifty state affiliates and more than 3,000 local chapters is proud to endorse former Senator Fred Thompson for President of the United States. Our endorsement is a testament to Senator Thompson’s long-standing pro-life record, his commitment to protecting unborn children, and our belief in his ability to win.

Fred Thompson has had a strong, consistent pro-life record throughout his political career. Thompson opposes abortion and believes the 1973, abortion-on-demand, Supreme Court decision was wrongly decided and must be reversed. During his eight years in the United States Senate, he always opposed the use of tax dollars to promote or pay for abortion and supported the many pro-life measures, such as parental notice and consent.

Thompson has also stated his opposition to the kind of stem cell research that requires killing human embryos, while supporting the kind of stem cell research that harms no one and is the only kind producing treatments and cures.

Since announcing his candidacy in September, Fred Thompson has run second only to pro-abortion candidate Rudy Giuliani for the Republican nomination in the overwhelming majority of national polls. As pro-lifers throughout the nation begin to unite behind his candidacy, he will be well positioned to win the nomination and the presidency.

In other words, the National Right to Life Committee has done their homework. If you are upset about this endorsement, it means you think it matters. It means you do respect NRLC and all the work they do to save innocent lives. In other words, you trust them. Let me ask you this, what motivation would NRLC have to endorse someone who is not solidly pro-life? For what reason would they suddenly, after all these years fighting in the pro-life movement, throw it all away on a candidate they were unsure of? I can promise you that the leaders of National Right to Life have met with Fred and his staff. They have questioned him about some of the odd statements he has made. They have made absolute sure that he will make a president they can stand behind and trust. Why would they not?

I know a lot of you — and I guess I’m speaking to Hunter fans, Huckabee fans, all the pro-lifers and social conservatives who wished for another nominee — may not like Fred very much. I’ve already told you that I am not madly in love with him. Instead of getting upset with National Right to Life, I would ask you to reconsider why you chose to support who you are supporting. Do you just like their good looks and stunning charisma? Or is it something deeper, like shared values and priorities? In my case, it’s the latter. I do believe that Duncan Hunter has great charisma, but the reason I supported him was because he is socially and fiscally conservative. He has a voting record to back it up and all signs point to him maintaining his conservatism in the future. In other words, it isn’t about the person — it’s about the values.

This is where Dr. Franz’s article comes into play. For those of us wishing to see socially and fiscally conservative values protected by and promoted in the White House, we cannot lose sight of the big picture. Dr. Franz has five lessons for pro-lifers to remember when it comes to politics:

1. Elections have consequences.

Just recall how Bill Clinton wrecked the pro-life policies of his presidential predecessors, how he gave us judges such as Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, how he unleashed the abortion drug RU-486 on this country, how he pushed the pro-abortion agenda at the UN, and how he wanted to make abortion a routine procedure within a federally mandated healthcare system. Just recall how the Democratic pro-abortion leadership in the Senate is absolutely opposed to appointing constitution-oriented judges to the federal bench.

2. There are no ideal candidates for political office — or, at best, very few of them.

3. The point is not to make a statement, but a difference.

When a “statement” (e.g., actively opposing a pro-life candidate facing a pro-abortionist) has the effect of defeating the pro-life candidate and letting a pro-abortionist win, the pro-life cause has been betrayed—no matter what highfalutin “principled” stance has been invoked to justify such moral posturing. Simply staying above the fray and not voting in such a case may not have the ringing sound of a “statement,” but it still has the same effect. Such non-voters allow the pro-abortionist to win. Again the pro-life cause loses—a negative difference, in effect. What true adherence to the pro-life cause compels us to do is to make a positive difference: actively working for the pro-life candidate, ensuring the loss of the pro-abortionist.

4. Don’t fall in love with your candidate.

We all know candidates, 100% pro-lifers, who would make great presidents, representatives, or senators—except that they just have no chance of getting elected. People have all kinds of motives for giving candidates their votes. Unfortunately, electing a 100% pro-life candidate into office motivates only a minority. The perfect pro-life candidate, if one is available, may not have the same perfect appeal to the generally wishy-washy-on-life-issues public. A realistic assessment may tell us that the election of that perfect pro-life candidate is unattainable. Sometimes, there is the temptation—especially in a primary fight—to fight so tenaciously for the hopeless candidate that the eventual winner becomes tarred as “not sufficiently pro-life”—weakening her for the confrontation against the pro-abortionist in the general election. So your guy can’t win the primary: (1) don’t demonize the other pro-life candidates during the primary race, and (2) close ranks behind the pro-life winner and support him in the general election. (ed: emphasis mine)

5. The perfect is the enemy of the good.

In many ways this principle restates what was observed above: in insisting on the unattainable we may lose the attainable.
And when we lose as pro-lifers, babies die. Think about that.

So, what’ll it be? You’ve fallen in love with your candidate. I’ve fallen in love with mine. You know your candidate is better than Fred Thompson.

Is fighting for the unattainable perfect against the attainable good worth letting more babies die?

8 Responses to “Why Fred? The Perfect vs. The Good”


  1. 1 missy

    I gotta tell you, I’ve found these last two posts very interesting and informative. I’ve been torn between Huckabee and Thompson for some time now. Huckabee is more like me and closer to what I want in a candidate, but Thompson or Romney just make more sense in their ability to get elected. I don’t think I’ve ever been as concerned about a primary for exactly the reason you state…if we aren’t careful we will end up with Giuliani. Shudder.

    Still torn about the whole thing, but these posts have helped, I must say! Great posts.

  2. 2 tieki rae

    Hi Missy,

    Thanks for stopping by. I was definitely in the crowd of liking a particular candidate most regardless of their so-called “electability”. In fact, I still resent the idea of letting the media dictate to us who is electable and who is not. If I had my way, all the Americans whining that, as much as they love them, candidates like Hunter and Huckabee were unelectable would be forced to endorse said candidates. I think then we’d realize they actually are electable if people would just stop talking and start acting.

    That said, I think we’re a ways off from “having my way.” :)

    When it all comes down, one thing social conservatives (and fiscal conservatives too!) can agree on is that we do not want a President Giuliani. The only way to prevent that from happening is to unite behind one candidate in the primaries. Giuliani has it easy — all the liberal Republicans alreadly like him and the conservative Republicans are split between 4-5 other candidates.

    Now that NRLC, an organization highly respected by social conservatives, has endorsed a candidate they believe upholds their values and possesses the capability to win, we must unite behind that candidate and elect a president who will lead America down the path we believe in.

    I guess what that means for me at this point is hoping that Hunter can be a vice president. :/

  3. 3 Scott

    If fmr. Sen. Thompson gets the nomination this summer, and chooses Rep. Hunter as his running mate, 4-8 years down the road, Rep. Hunter could be *very* electable with some super publicity as VP :-)

  4. 4 tieki rae

    Scott, exactly! I really do think Hunter would be a great choice for VP. After all, coming from a state like California would be really good for the Republican ticket.

    I hope Senator Thompson does get the nomination… as soon as I’m done mourning my support of Hunter, I’m going full force for Thompson. At this point, I know if he doesn’t win, Guiliani will.

  5. 5 Sunflower Desert

    That’s what I’m thinking Scott. I would love to see a Thompson / Hunter ticket now.

  6. 6 Sam Pierce

    Tieki,

    I hope you don’t read this as a lecture or a rebuke as I don’t intend it to be. I am concerned about a potential slippery slope regarding your last line:

    “Is fighting for the unattainable perfect against the attainable good worth letting more babies die?”

    It seems very similar to the argument that the elites use to push Rudy. I’m not saying that I think Thompson is as bad as Rudy, obviously he would be a ton better than Rudy. My point regards giving up on what one believes to be right. It seems like incrementally moving away from supporting what one believes to to be right to supporting what one believes to be ok (and seemingly more electable.) I am wondering if there is a next step (i.e. supporting Giuliani because he says he will appoint strict constructionist judges.)

    As for me, I continue to support Duncan Hunter and will continue to work on his behalf. If the Republican nominee is pro-life, I will support him and maybe work on his behalf (depending on his other positions.) If the Republican nominee is Giuliani I will view it as an indicator of the direction of the Republican Party away from a pro-life position and I will cease to be a Republican. (Not that I will become a Demoncrat.)

    I also must admit that my bouts of severe discouragement come at increasingly more frequent intervals as I begin to see that we the people maybe don’t really matter when it comes to politics.

  7. 7 tieki rae

    Sam,

    I understand exactly what you’re saying and I do think it can tend toward a slippery slope. However, I am just trying to keep in mind the original reason I supported Duncan Hunter. I want to see a pro-life president in the White House. Having spent extensive (sometimes exhaustive!) time with the National Right to Life Committee, I highly respect them and the process they went through to find a candidate to endorse.

    No, Fred’s not perfect - but he is good. The slippery slope stops there. Giuliani is by no definition good. God forbid he ends up as the Republican nominee, I’m with you in that I won’t vote for him. At least Fred Thompson is pro-life and generally a strong social and fiscal conservative. I don’t like him as much as I like Hunter, but I do trust NRLC. When they say that Fred has the highest likelihood to beat Giuliani out of all the pro-life candidates, they know what they’re talking about.

    Before NRLC’s endorsement, pro-life voters were divided between 4-5 candidates: Hunter, Huckabee, Romney, McCain, Thompson. Pro-abortion Republicans and other more liberal Republicans are united behind Giuliani. Giuliani therefore has a unique advantage in the race. If we want a pro-life candidate to be our nominee, we all must decide on one candidate to vote for as a group. If we don’t, our votes will be split 5 ways and Giuliani will inevitably get the nomination.

    If Fred Thompson - imperfect as he is - is our best bet to put a united front against Giuliani, then I’m voting for Fred Thompson. I’m going to work equally hard to promote him and at the same time encourage Hunter to be the VP. Then, in 4-8 years we will have our perfect president.

    I will say this, NRLC has one purpose and one purpose only, to save lives. Strategically, if worse comes to worst and Giuliani is nominated by the Republicans, they may have to endorse him simply because he is the lesser of the two evils (since it doesn’t take much to be better than Hillary/Obama/Edwards). I cannot vote for him, but understand why NRLC would endorse him.

    I hope (and I know they hope) that the Fred endorsement will prevent Giuliani from receiving the nomination, therefore preventing the threat of being forced to endorse him.

    Overall, I want to save babies’ lives. I love Duncan Hunter, but making a statement in the primary because I like him best is not worth the risk of having Giuliani in office.

    I hope you can see where I’m coming from.

  8. 8 Angel

    thanks so much for stoppin by Teiki..missed ya too!..I’m still confused bout the candidates though……..big sigh..lol..and I have to re type my info each time I come here..can u set it to remember me?..lol :)

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