Since Fox News announced the line-up for the first GOP debate, the seven candidates who failed to make the cut have made their displeasure clear. Rick Santorum (polling at 1.4 percent) called the decision “preposterous” and “an insult to voters.” Bobby Jindal (polling at 1.4 percent) released a campaign ad dismissing the primetime debate as “all about a celebrity” and touting his popularity with the crucial “old white people in Iowa” demographic. Lindsay Graham (polling at 0.6 percent), meanwhile, released this tweet taking a potshot at frontrunner Donald Trump:
#HappyHourDebate – Thursday 5pm. Be there! pic.twitter.com/CljFSSi0C9
— Lindsey Graham (@LindseyGrahamSC) August 5, 2015
As petulant as they may sound, they do have a point: In August 2012, Rick Perry led the polls, while eventual winner Mitt Romney struggled to stay ahead of Ron Paul and Michele Bachmann. At the same point in 2008, Rudy Giuliani was a solid frontrunner, while John McCain was looking like just another also-ran. The reality show drama over who gets to participate in the primetime debate is more a symptom of the Republican Party’s internal disarray than individual candidates’ chances at winning the election. When pro-trade, pro-immigration Jeb Bush can exist in the same party as Donald “I beat China all the time” Trump, there’s room for just about any candidate to carve out a base of support, however small it might be. Plus, easy access to campaign money means long-shots like Jim Gilmore and George Pataki (polling at .2 percent and .5 percent, respectively) can keep a campaign running, even with virtually no support. This is how you end up with the most crowded primary in history.
So, what is an unlucky GOP candidate placed at the “kids’ table” to do? The answer is to toss as many outlandish ideas out there as possible and hope one of them fires up the Republican base. That’s exactly what the candidates did tonight—taking on issues of immigration, reproductive health, and US engagement in the Middle East with all the subtlety of a pickaxe. The candidates went to extraordinary lengths to present themselves as tough on immigration, from Rick Perry suggesting that the US government dispatch high-tech planes to provide 24-hour surveillance of the US border to Santorum declaring that the only reason Democrats care about immigration is because they want to bring more people across the border to vote blue. (Hillary Clinton, on the other hand, has embraced immigration reform as part of her agenda.) Meanwhile, Lindsey Graham proclaimed that he would monitor mosques in the United States to prevent an ISIS attack, which is unsurprising given his extreme foreign policy views. When it came to reproductive rights, the presidential hopefuls did not miss a chance to point to the controversial Planned Parenthood videos as evidence that the women’s health organization is willing to break the law, a claim that is simply not true. Pataki declared that, even though he doesn’t support a ban on abortion, he would not hesitate to defund Planned Parenthood. If the candidates were successful, the debate will spawn a few eye-catching headlines. In the meantime, here are the highlights:
Ethan CoreyTwitterEthan Corey is a summer 2015 Nation intern.
Sara RathodSara Rathod is a summer 2015 Nation intern.