D.C. Dispatch June 12, 2007

Even though he's a former senator, Fred Thompson is positioned to run against Washington.

by William Schneider

from National Journal

The Papa Bear Factor

Article Tools

E-mail Article
Printer Format

What would Fred Thompson bring to the Republican race? As a former senator, he's well connected. As an actor, he's well known. "He is well known on a soft level," says Republican strategist David Winston. "One of the challenges he faces is to flesh out the details."

Some Republicans see Thompson as the answer to their prayers: another Ronald Reagan—meaning, a conservative who's also a winner. Thompson recently asked a conservative audience at the Lincoln Club in California, "You ever wonder why, when our problems seem to be getting larger, so many of our politicians seem to be getting smaller?"

Thompson is not small. He's 6 feet, 6 inches tall and seems big in other ways, too. "Stature," conservative commentator Bill Bennett recently told CNN. "Everyone knows who he is. He's famous. He has a Reaganite quality, including the fact that he's a movie star. He has a tremendous voice and presence."

For decades, conservatives struggled to take over the Republican Party. They remember Reagan as the man who led them to power. They're worried that the current front-runners for the 2008 Republican presidential nomination may challenge the conservative ascendancy.

Mitt Romney? "A little convenient in the switching of his positions," Bennett said. John McCain? "A little too mavericky" in Bennett's view. Rudy Giuliani? "He's out there on social and domestic issues in a way that a lot of the [conservative] base may be willing to accept but isn't happy with."

And Thompson? "Fred Thompson, in the imagination, feels like the bowl of porridge that is just right," Bennett said. "But the tasting is yet to occur."

Is Thompson a reliable conservative? He supported campaign finance reform, which conservatives hate. And an evangelical leader once complained that Thompson didn't talk enough about his faith.

But on Iraq, Thompson's conservatism seems staunch. "I don't think the American people are going to turn the keys to this country over to a party who invest their political capital in defeat," Thompson said.

One way to get conservative juices flowing is to take on filmmaker Michael Moore, as Thompson did recently. "You know, the next time you're down in Cuba visiting your buddy Castro, you might ask him about another documentary filmmaker," Thompson said in a Web video addressed to Moore. "His name is Nicolas Guillen. He did something Castro didn't like, and they put him in a mental institution for several years, giving him devastating electroshock treatments. Mental institution, Michael. Might be something you ought to think about."

What clinches the sale for many conservatives is that Thompson looks like a winner. "This is the guy we need to beat the ultimate Democratic nominee," South Carolina state Sen. John Hawkins said. "And if we're ever going to be able to beat them, the person to do it is going to be Fred Thompson." At a time when Americans are concerned about physical security, Thompson has been described as "the ultimate Papa Bear."

Reagan was anti-Washington. He used to talk about "puzzle palaces on the Potomac." Running against Washington is Thompson's specialty. "You wouldn't think we have to make the lower-tax case again," he told the Lincoln Club, "but you have to make it every day in Washington, D.C."

Thompson has been a senator and a Washington lawyer and lobbyist going all the way back to Watergate, when he served as chief Republican counsel for the Senate Watergate Committee. But he campaigns as a Washington outsider. When he first ran for the Senate in 1994, Thompson wore a flannel shirt and drove a pickup truck all over Tennessee, calling for term limits. He plays the role of outsider. To prove it, he got out: Thompson left the Senate in 2002, at the end of his first full term. Good timing, because that's when the Bush administration started to get into trouble.

Now, once again, Thompson is positioned to run against Washington. "I think the biggest problem that we have today is the disconnect between Washington, D.C., and the people of the United States," Thompson told an audience in Connecticut.

At a time when voters have lost confidence in the Bush administration and are desperate for change, an anti-Washington candidate could be very interesting, especially if he's a Republican.

William Schneider is the Cable News Network's senior political analyst. He is also a resident fellow at the American Enterprise Institute in Washington, D.C., and a contributing editor for the Los Angeles Times, National Journal, and The Atlantic Monthly. His column appears every week in National Journal, a weekly magazine covering politics and government published in Washington, D.C.

Article Tools

E-mail Article
Printer Format

Discuss this article in Post & Riposte.

More from National Journal

Subscribe to our e-mail newsletter.

Recent commentary from National Journal

August 7, 2007

Innocents in Prison

Many thousands of wrongly convicted people are rotting in prisons and jails around the country.

August 7, 2007

The Candidates' Four Detention Camps

Deciding what to do with jihadist operatives is the country's most urgent legal question. But there's little sign that the presidential candidates have given it much thought.

August 7, 2007

Crowd Control

Everybody's buzzing about citizen journalism. But the "journalism" could use some editing.

August 7, 2007

Democratic Slugfest

An exchange of blows between Hillary Rodham Clinton and Barack Obama was bound to happen.

July 31, 2007

Shortsighted on Judges

Senate Democrats are playing a dangerous political game in opposing confirmation of Leslie Southwick, a wellqualified judicial nominee from Mississippi.

July 31, 2007

Beyond Trade Adjustment Assistance

Workers who lose their jobs because of trade are no more deserving than workers whose jobs disappear for other reasons.

July 31, 2007

The Poverty Candidates

John Edwards made poverty an issue in his 2004 campaign for the White House. This time around, he has company: Barack Obama is also working to put poverty back on the political agenda.

July 24, 2007

Are the Democrats Serious?

Both sides deserve to lose the brewing battle between the White House and Congress over executive privilege.

July 24, 2007

Of Church and State

Religion now looms larger than economic class as a source of political division.

July 17, 2007

Flying Blind in a Red-Tape Blizzard

Based on spending, President Bush appears to be the biggest regulator since the Nixon-Ford years.


Name

Address 1

Address 2

City

State Zip

Email

Atlantic Voices

The Jesuits Win One Read more

09 July 2008 11:00 A.M.

Winning is Losing Unless You Win Read more

09 July 2008 10:05 A.M.

Albion's Seed Read more

09 July 2008 10:10 A.M.

When America sneezes, the world catches cold Read more

09 July 2008 10:55 A.M.

He Ain't Got Time For Comedians Read more

09 July 2008 10:54 A.M.

We are ready #3! A short anecdote and a long email Read more

09 July 2008 09:16 A.M.

Aspen Without Ideas Read more

08 July 2008 10:11 A.M.

Readings on education Read more

09 July 2008 06:41 A.M.