NP Rank:
Gay activist, political analyst Andrew Sullivan splits w/ right
I cannot support a movement which is deeply homophobic; cynically employs fear of homosexuals to win votes. . . ~ Andrew Sullivan; The Atlantic, "Leaving the Right"
Andrew Sullivan, who rose to stardom in the late '80s, and has become known as political pundit, television news guest, gay activist and author, has always been somewhat of a hybrid: Gay, but Catholic; populist, but conservative and Republican ( although he broke with W Bush and voted for Kerry, and then for Obama).
Now, he is formally washing his hands of the right, and tells us why, in his beautiful treatise, Leaving the Right: (Gee, Andrew, all of what you say is what we'd all been trying to tell you for the last 15 years):
I cannot support a movement that claims to believe in limited government but backed an unlimited domestic and foreign policy presidency that assumed illegal, extra-constitutional dictatorial powers until forced by the system to return to the rule of law.I cannot support a movement that exploded spending and borrowing and blames its successor for the debt.
I cannot support a movement that so abandoned government's minimal and vital role to police markets and address natural disasters that it gave us Katrina and the financial meltdown of 2008.
I cannot support a movement that holds torture as a core value.
I cannot support a movement that holds that purely religious doctrine should govern civil political decisions and that uses the sacredness of religious faith for the pursuit of worldly power.
I cannot support a movement that is deeply homophobic, cynically deploys fear of homosexuals to win votes, and gives off such a racist vibe that its share of the minority vote remains pitiful.
I cannot support a movement which has no real respect for the institutions of government and is prepared to use any tactic and any means to fight political warfare rather than conduct a political conversation.
I cannot support a movement that sees permanent war as compatible with liberal democratic norms and limited government.
I cannot support a movement that criminalizes private behavior in the war on drugs.
I cannot support a movement that would back a vice-presidential candidate manifestly unqualified and duplicitous because of identity politics and electoral cynicism.
I cannot support a movement that regards gay people as threats to their own families.
I cannot support a movement that does not accept evolution as a fact.
I cannot support a movement that sees climate change as a hoax and offers domestic oil exploration as the core plank of an energy policy.
I cannot support a movement that refuses ever to raise taxes, while proposing no meaningful reductions in government spending.
I cannot support a movement that refuses to distance itself from a demagogue like Rush Limbaugh or a nutjob like Glenn Beck.
I cannot support a movement that believes that the United States should be the sole global power, should sustain a permanent war machine to police the entire planet, and sees violence as the core tool for international relations.
Does this make me a "radical leftist" as Michelle Malkin would say? Emphatically not. But it sure disqualifies me from the current American right.
To paraphrase Reagan, I didn't leave the conservative movement. It left me.
And increasingly, I'm not alone.
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Susan Marie Kovalinsky
Ledgewood, New Jersey, United States




Most RecentMost Recommended Comments (5)
at 02:50 on December 5th, 2009
Gee, Andrew. What took you so long? Be prepared for some pretty nasty "homo" comments from your former brethren.
at 03:40 on December 5th, 2009
The Log Cabin Republicans?
at 16:15 on December 5th, 2009
Nope.
at 06:22 on December 5th, 2009
Yes, those. LCR ; )
at 06:31 on December 5th, 2009
Ha!