Pubdate: Sun, 29 Aug 1999 Source: Observer, The (UK) Copyright: Guardian Media Group plc. 1999 Contact: http://www.guardian.co.uk/ Author: Ed Vulliamy LOONY RIGHT TRIPS UP BUSH George W. Bush got to talk about the US economy this weekend, thereby reaching a landmark in his Republican presidential campaign. He was, of course, asked about the only subject the reporters are interested in - cocaine - but for once 'Junior' Bush ignored the question. Yet the pressure on Bush and his past with drugs grew into a mighty swell, coming not from the media but from the last place that America expected - and Bush wanted - the Republican Right. And it came not in the form of accusations - quite the reverse. It came from a sudden flurry of prominent Republicans calling Bush's bluff by 'coming out' to declare their indulgence in the white powder - and other offences on the list of the Seven Deadly Republican Sins. In New Mexico, Governor Gary Johnson came forward to talk to the press, including The Observer, about his past with cocaine and marijuana. 'It was not something that anybody would ever have known, but I knew that I should fess up, and if I didn't win, so be it.' On Wednesday, Johnson was joined by a Republican running to succeed his distinguished father in the US Senate representing Rhode Island, Lincoln Chafee. Chafee came on a local television show and said without blinking, when asked the only question every politician was asked last week: 'Yes, I have.' He said he had snorted cocaine and smoked marijuana 'several times'. And unlike President Clinton - ever-resistant to the toxic blend of truth and history - yes, Chafee said, he did inhale. Next day the spotlight switched to another practice which Republican commandments traditionally place even higher than Class A drugs in the 'Thou Shalt Not' ratings: homosexuality. Steve May, an up-and-coming hard-right Republican just elected to the Arizona legislature, is a Mormon and a soldier. But, on Thursday, May issued forth his loudest disclosure yet about how he met and dated his first gay companion. The emergence of Republican politicians talking unabashedly about homosexuality or 'shovelling snow' has both reflected and propelled an intriguing sea change in the coming presidential election and in American politics. They have enabled the Republican Right to become the unexpected claimants to 'wacky' and fringe-living social terrain, as the Democrats scramble from under the ruins of the Monica Lewinsky scandal to present themselves as Vice-President Al Gore's woodentops, who never took drugs and barely ever had sex. As the Democrats become the social conservatives, the Right meanwhile addresses the hypocrisies in drug policy and homosexuality. In addition, there have been legions of outright 'wacko' candidates, iconoclasts and libertarians brandishing rhetoric that traditionally belonged to the Left. It is a phenomenon that Gary Wills, the literary critic and political commentator, takes seriously, seeing a blend of successful populism with libertarianism and a bit of 'anti-intellectual chest-thumping'. And, above all, it is the exposure of what Jesse 'The Body' Ventura, Governor of Minnesota, calls 'high-pocrisy'. Ventura is father to the 'wacko' candidates. Last week, he returned to the ring to referee his first World Wrestling Federation match - giving as good as he got to the beasts of brawn and the busty female 'trainers' in sequined bikinis. The evening was marked by a bar fight and someone hitting the Governor with a metal folding chair. But beneath The Body there rips an undertow of other, similar types. In Memphis - the city in which Martin Luther King was killed and which has spawned a million Elvis sightings - the mayoral election has been turned by the maverick Right into something like a drag queen show. The battle is neck-and-neck between two candiates and the balance - if not the mayoral seat itself - may be clinched by Jerry 'The King' Lawler, who goes around dressed not as 'King' Elvis but as a British monarch, complete with crown and ermine regal robes. Lawler, also a wrestler and sponsored by Ventura, shares his mentor's penchant for straight talk: 'I'd like to see things from your point of view,' he teased the incumbent Mayor, 'but I just can't seem to get my head up my rear end.' That's about the only policy of Lawler's the voters can remember, but they love it. Most important, the spurt of cocaine confessions has highlighted from within the Republican Party not only the inconsistencies between Bush's past and his model for how Americans should live, but the abyss between Bush's erstwhile cocaine habit and his current drug policies. Despite his confessions, Bush is Governor of a state which prides itself on a pitiless imprisonment policy on drugs. Possession of less than a gram of cocaine can mean incarceration. Chafee refused to commit himself on policy. He recalled 'very tumultuous times' and said he said he knew that, with the cocaine question doing the rounds of Bush, President Clinton and Mayor Rudy Giuliani of New York, his turn would come. 'I struggled with what's the politically correct answer. But in the end, honesty is the best policy. It was part of the culture. 'People are tolerant, and if you are forthright and honest with the public, you have nothing to hide.' It's the kind of remark that Clinton and Bush should find utterly disarming - but not as troublesome as those from Governor Johnson. Johnson is as conservative as any Republican when it comes to the death penalty, crime, taxes and religion. But on drugs, he is a libertarian and a heretic. He opposes the criminalisation of drugs, on grounds of cost and morality. 'We are spending incredible amounts of our resources on incarceration,' he says. 'I've done a cost-benefit analysis, and this one really stinks.' Johnson speaks, in a faxed interview with The Observer, about what he calls 'an incredible hypocrisy here, that there are 78 million Americans who have used illegal drugs, and I don't think 78 million Americans who would discount themselves from running for President or for public office for that reason.' But that's not all. 'If I still did drugs, if I drank, I would not be sitting here today. Bad choice. Don't do illegal drugs. But is it criminal? Direct a war toward drug use - but to go to jail? 'I don't know about George Bush, but I do know about 78 million other Americans - given the right set of circumstances, and they're in jail. 'They've got a felony on their record and this is not something policywise that I think the country should be doing.' He ends up by lambasting his own law enforcement team, and the hostility of New Mexico's State Attorney, John Kelly: 'They are only looking at the crime side of the issue, a knee-jerk response.' Johnson's opposition to drug prohibition may not be shared by his fellow Republicans - but it is respected. The right-wing League of Women Voters, for instance, is sponsoring a forum on drug legalisation. And the Governor is being courted by the hard-right libertarian CATO Institute in Washington DC. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek Rea