miércoles, 30 de marzo de 2011

"The 5 craziest"



Steve Kornacki (Salon.com) ha hecho un TOP-5 de los candidatos presidenciales republicanos más disparatados de las últimas décadas. Para él son Phil Crane, Pat Robertson (en la foto practicando boxeo en New Hampshire en 1988), Pat Buchanan, Robert Dornan y Alan Keyes.

(...) 1. Rep. Phil Crane -- 1980

The heir to Donald Rumsfeld's old House seat, Crane came to Congress in 1969, a Goldwater campaign veteran made good. He spent the '70s racking up one of the most conservative voting records in the House and, in the wake of Ronald Reagan's unsuccessful 1976 White House bid, set out to run for the presidency himself in 1980. (His theory was that Reagan, because of age and his two failed bids for the GOP nod, would end up passing on '80, leaving Crane to gobble up "New Right" support.)

Crane's politics weren't really more conservative than Reagan's, but unlike the Gipper, he didn’t know how to mask his extremism with warmth and charm. Instead, he conformed to the popular image of a far-right whacko, purchasing (for instance) 30-minute blocks of time to air a speech in which he held up the Bible and quoted from it in an effort to establish America's Christian roots. He also attracted unwanted attention when, at the height of the campaign, he was sued by Richard Viguerie, the direct mail pioneer, for unpaid bills.

More damaging, though, was the wrath of Bill Loeb, the notoriously vengeful publisher of New Hampshire's largest (and most conservative) newspaper, the Union-Leader. Fearful that Crane's presence in the race would hurt Reagan, Loeb skewered him in a series of front-page editorials, then commissioned a devastating story that used anonymous sources to portray Crane as a serial philanderer with a drinking problem. The story attracted national attention and helped Loeb achieve his goal: Crane finished a distant fifth in Iowa and won only 2 percent in New Hampshire. (Years later, he would publicly admit to a drinking problem and seek treatment.)

2. Pat Robertson -- 1988

Continúa (...)

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