Posted on 10/04/2014 7:55:41 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
To the untrained eye, Virginias political scandals are beginning to become indistinguishable from one another. Reading reports last night of yet another brouhaha in the mother of states, my tired eyes struggled to place the words on the page in their appropriate context. For a brief moment at least, McAuliffe and McDonnell were one and the same; Macca slurred effortlessly into Macaca; and the cardinal sins of job-selling, gift-taking, and good old-fashioned bribery melted into a single morass, leaving me to wonder whether there is anyone left in Richmond who is on the level.
Americans are accustomed to wrongdoing in Chicago and Louisiana, and to such an extent that leaders in those places make the news these days if they do not end up disgraced or incarcerated. But now that the Old Dominion has been invaded by New Washington, one has to wonder whether Virginia, too, will join the ranks of the permanently iniquitous. It was, after all, only one month ago that Republican Bob McDonnell was found guilty of eleven counts of corruption, having taken more than $165,000 worth of gifts and loans from a businessman who wanted his company promoted. Now the mansion at Capitol Square is in the spotlight again. Per a report in the Washington Post, Governor Terry McAuliffes chief of staff, Paul Reagan, has been caught in a brazen and illegal attempt to induce a state senator to delay his retirement an attempt that Hot Airs Ed Morrissey suggests convincingly simply had to have come from the top. In June, the Post reports, Reagan left a voice-mail message for a Democrat who was on the verge of quitting the General Assembly . . . saying that the senators daughter might get a top state job if he stayed to support the governors push to expand Medicaid. Initially, McAuliffes spokesman denied the charge. But, having been read a transcript of Reagans message, the point was swiftly conceded. Conveniently enough, federal investigators were already on the scene in Richmond, the Democratic party having previously accused Republicans of playing a similar game. Time will tell which charges stick, but, if the Posts Aaron Blake is to be believed, McAuliffes got problems.
Those who are wondering how a governors chief of staff could possibly be so unyieldingly naïve as to willingly record his corruption on tape might take a moment to remember who Terry McAuliffe is and, for that matter, with whom he has typically elected to surround himself. Moreover, one might examine how he found himself in his present sinecure. As, in times of old, service rendered to the king would eventually garner a lord or lady a lucrative country seat, McAuliffe is now reaping the rewards of years spent assisting both the Clinton machine and the Democratic party at large. It is rare to witness an election in which a candidate is loathed as keenly by his supporters as by his opponents, but somehow McAuliffe managed to pull it off, benefiting ultimately from his powerful connections and the perceived extremism of his opponent and not from any talent for governing of his own. He is, Salons Alex Pareene wrote in 2013, a soulless political animal with no redeeming human characteristics whatsoever, and he is useful to his champions not as an independent leader but as a loyal and protean pawn who will do whatever it takes to get his own way. If Virginia is eventually to descend into the mire, voters could not have selected a better doyen than McAuliffe to steer the state downwards.
To his credit, perhaps, McAuliffe has never sought to conceal who he is. Rather, he has proven to be so startlingly candid about his sociopathy that he saw fit to compile the details into a book. Demonstrating an alarming lack of understanding as to how normal people operate, McAuliffe proudly recounted in his autobiography no fewer than five occasions on which he had left his wife in distress in order to go raise money one of which, astonishingly, came while she was giving birth to his daughter. This, it seems, is par for the course. In consequence, even endorsements of him end up sounding like denunciations. McAuliffe is the ultimate political insider and a self-described wheeler-dealer, the Washington Post observed in the course of announcing its support for his candidacy, and his stock in trade has been playing the angles where access and profit intersect. Nevertheless, the paper proposed, he takes sensible stands on key issues. Among those key issues was Medicaid. Is anybody surprised that in pursuit of his goal, McAuliffe reverted to type?
In one sense at least, there is a perverse logic to McAuliffes tenure. If, as they routinely tell pollsters, American voters believe all of their politicians to be intractably corrupt, there is a refreshing honesty in their wishing to elect those who are the most upfront about their flaws. And yet, one suspects that McAuliffe is the product of something more than just mass electoral candor. As the United States becomes more politically divided, the scope for charlatans and hirelings will inevitably increase, character and judgment being less important in the age of Leviathan than ideological conformity and naked self-interest. Last year in Virginia, Republican Ken Cuccinelli evidently scared just enough of the electorate to permit McAuliffe to take charge, voters who were fully aware of how likely their charge was to embarrass them electing to return him anyhow. That such a man should be anywhere near a seat that, at various points and in one form or another has been held by Sir Walter Raleigh, Patrick Henry, Thomas Jefferson, and James Monroe, is, historically speaking, rather distressing. That he should be the second governor in a year to find himself embroiled in a scandal does not bode well for the future. But if the machine rolls on unchecked, this is precisely what we should expect: sure, voters and power-players will say, hes as crooked as they come, but hell direct the behemoth in my favor.
Charles C. W. Cooke is a staff writer at National Review.
No ethics, please. We’re Democrats.
The “rottenness” must be the kinds of officials that VA chooses with regularity. The hapless GOP is still paying for the “macaca” moment.
What is the key word above? Pretty obvious
I didn’t know any part of VA is still conservative. Glad to hear it is. Are you west of Culpeper?
McAuliffe has left a trail of corruption slime wherever he has been. Where did the voters of Virginia get the idea that he would be different this time?
Culpeper is in northern VA, which is heavily rat infested. We're far to the south, in Campbell County.
Most of Virginia went red in 2012, but the demographics are killing us....the blacks in Hampton Roads (the east coastal area), and the continuing migration of liberals from the Northeast. The central counties that voted for Obama have a high black population. Liberal Charlottesville is in Albemarle Co.
—and then there’s this—
http://www.publicpolicypolling.com/main/2014/10/rounds-support-falls-to-35-in-south-dakota-race.html
Wow, we never saw that coming. /s
Per a report in the Washington Post, Governor Terry McAuliffes chief of staff, Paul Reagan... "left a voice-mail message for a Democrat who was on the verge of quitting the General Assembly . . . saying that the senator's daughter might get a top state job if he stayed to support the governor's push to expand Medicaid." Initially, McAuliffe's spokesman denied the charge. But, having been "read a transcript of Reagan's message," the point was swiftly conceded. Conveniently enough, federal investigators were already on the scene in Richmond, the Democratic party having previously accused Republicans of playing a similar game.Just in case everyone forgot, I want to make sure to mention the buzzwords neoconservative, uniparty, Chris Christy, George Bush, John McCain, and Mitt Rommney.
Virginia Assembly is heavily conservative. Probably one of the most in the country.
The Obama-Holder tagteam was replicated in Virginia by design with McAuliffe and the new Dem Attorney General—including vote fraud out the wazoo.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.