Ben Carson anti-Muslim comments: Bad for Republicans?
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Ben Carson won鈥檛 apologize for saying he 鈥渁bsolutely would not鈥 support a Muslim for president. He鈥檚 doubling down on this opinion despite the controversy it鈥檚 created.
On Sunday, a spokesman for Dr. Carson鈥檚 presidential campaign said that Carson does not believe individual Muslims should be barred from running for the White House. But the retired neurosurgeon would not vote for a Muslim, and does not believe others should.
鈥淗e has great respect for the Muslim community, but there is a huge gulf between the faith and practice of the Muslim faith, and our Constitution and American values,鈥 Carson spokesman .
Some public figures supported Carson鈥檚 words. Frank Gaffney, a Pentagon official in the Reagan administration, said that a Muslim president might try to govern under sharia (Islamic law), instead of the US Constitution. On 鈥淔ox & Friends鈥 Monday, morning co-host Brian Kilmeade said that Carson should not be condemned as a racist for raising the question.
鈥淭his is an open dialogue. Why is everyone calling on everyone to apologize?鈥 .
But many others were quick to distance themselves from Carson鈥檚 opinion, or to criticize it. Fellow GOP hopeful Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas noted that the Constitution explicitly bars a religious test for federal office. Republican candidate and Ohio Gov. John Kasich said that important qualifications for president have nothing to do with religion.
Carson鈥檚 comments are no different from saying a Catholic should not be president because he or she would follow only Vatican imperatives, many critics noted. That鈥檚 a charge that helped derail the 1928 bid of New York Gov. Al Smith for the Oval Office. In 1960, John F. Kennedy felt it important enough to address it directly on the separation of church and state.
Carson is a bigot to see Islam as terror and nothing more, writes Ta-Nehisi Coates, a journalist and author who writes often about racial issues.
鈥淵ou would think a wise 海角大神 would be more prudent,鈥 Mr. Coates .
It鈥檚 true that substantial numbers of US voters agree with Carson. In a 2015 Gallup poll, 38 percent of respondents said that they would not vote for an otherwise well-qualified Muslim presidential candidate. The comparable figure for Republicans only was 55 percent, a majority.
But the flip side of this is that a majority of the nation 鈥 60 percent 鈥 answered 鈥測es鈥 to the vote-for-a-Muslim question. Thus Republicans intent on winning in 2016 are face-palming over the fact that Carson has been drawn into a debate that won鈥檛 help the party in the United States at large, and could have been easily avoided.
At the right-leaning National Review, Jonah Goldberg writes that whether the US should have a Muslim president is a 鈥渉ypothetical and ridiculous question." There is no Muslim candidate at the moment in the GOP race. Carson should have sidestepped the issue, but as an inexperienced candidate he allowed the press to bait him into an unhelpful discussion, in Mr. Goldberg鈥檚 view.
The right answer would have stressed that there is no religious test for the Oval Office, but all candidates should answer how faith informs their policy agendas, according to the National Review writer.
鈥淚f his answers are no good, he won鈥檛 get elected,鈥 .
Donald Trump might be the instigator of this whole contretemps, opine others. Without Mr. Trump in the race, continuing to raise questions about the discredited notion that President Obama was born in Kenya, such a direct question about an entire religion might not have come up.
鈥淭his is what happens when a party welcomes with open arms someone who continues to espouse 鈥榖irther鈥 views 鈥 and when that someone leads the party鈥檚 presidential nominating race,鈥 Chuck Todd, Mark Murray, and Carrie Dann of NBC News.