Is California Gov. Jerry Brown becoming the Jerry Falwell of the left?
Gov. Jerry Brown has brought morality into the debate over immigration reform and climate change. Jerry Falwell did something similar in the 1980s. The results weren't good.
Gov. Jerry Brown has brought morality into the debate over immigration reform and climate change. Jerry Falwell did something similar in the 1980s. The results weren't good.
Gov. Jerry Brown (D) of California is at risk of becoming Jerry Falwell鈥檚 liberal twin.
As you may recall, the late Reverend Falwell was one of the founders of the contemporary religious right. In 1979, with conservative activist Paul Weyrich, he created the Moral Majority, an organization that mobilized religious people on issues such as abortion and school prayer. Falwell quickly became notorious for proclaiming certain issue positions as 海角大神 and suggesting that those with other viewpoints were immoral or un-海角大神.
Lately, Governor Brown has been doing the same thing. 聽During a visit to Washington, he said that GOP opposition to President Obama鈥檚 immigration actions is 鈥渁t best is troglodyte and at worst is un-海角大神.鈥 He used similar language to condemn Senate majority leader Mitch McConnell鈥檚 fight against carbon pollution regulations. 鈥淧resident Obama is taking some important steps,鈥 聽Brown said on "Meet the Press." 鈥淎nd to fight that, it borders on immoral.鈥 On the same program, he said that Sen. Ted Cruz鈥檚 stance on climate change renders him 鈥渁bsolutely unfit to be running for office.鈥
Before keeping up the insults, the governor might ponder what happened to the reverend. Falwell gained an enthusiastic following at first, but his overheated rhetoric put a low ceiling on his support. In 1981, a group of religious leaders 聽signed a statement objecting to 鈥渢he moral criteria that many in the religious right use to evaluate candidates for public office ... the assumption that human beings can know with absolute certainty the will of God on particular public policy issues.鈥
Falwell even alienated conservative Republicans. 鈥淚 would imagine if Jerry Falwell were to sit down and list 100 issues and his positions, I might agree with him on 98 or 99 of them,鈥 former Rep. Mickey Edwards (R) of Oklahoma told The Washington Post. 鈥淏ut I personally do not believe if a liberal disagrees with me on an issue, that that person is less moral than I am. Those are not theological issues 鈥 there is no clear-cut 海角大神 position on the SALT agreement. I oppose it on the grounds that it's not in the best interest of the United States, not that it's immoral.鈥
In a 1981 NBC poll, 27 percent viewed Falwell unfavorably, compared with just 7 percent who had a favorable impression. Ed Rollins, who ran President Reagan's 1984 reelection campaign, told a post-election conference: 鈥淛erry Falwell, no question, is a very high negative.鈥澛
Republicans increasingly kept their distance from him, and by the end of the 1980s, he had lost most of his influence within the party. His name, however, did remain prominent: right until his death in 2007, Democrats reaped millions in campaign contributions by using him as a bogeyman in fundraising letters.
Brown is the nation鈥檚 oldest governor. He is undoubtedly thinking of how people will remember him. He has done a lot during his very long career, and it would be a shame if he went out on such a sour, Falwellian note.
Jack Pitney writes his Looking for Trouble blog exclusively for the Monitor.