| The Irish Races to Watch
By Tom Deignan
PROMINENT political analysts Steve and Cokie Roberts were recently asked
by Parade magazine to identify key voting groups as the brutal 2006 election
season draws to a close. Along with Hispanics, independents and married
moms, the husband and wife team also identified “white Catholics,”
of which Irish Americans are arguably the largest voting bloc.
“As ethnic Catholics left behind their immigrant roots and old neighborhoods,”
they wrote, “many shifted from the Democrats to the GOP. As Democratic
icon Tip O’Neill used to say, ‘Many of our members are now
rich enough to be Republicans.’”
Team Roberts also identified the Pennsylvania Senate race as a particularly
crucial one to watch. That’s where abortion rights opponent Bob
Casey is trying to unseat one of the most conservative Republicans in
the Senate, Rick Santorum.
As a long profile published in The New Yorker a few months back put it,
Casey is the son of Robert P. Casey, “an Irish Democrat pol of the
old school, the son and grandson of miners, and who championed labor and
believed in government as a beneficent force. He was also pro-life.”
Indeed, as both voters and candidates, Irish Americans are expected to
play a pivotal role when the winners and losers of 2006 are sorted out
next week.
That’s especially true in New York State, where Irish pols are in
tough scandal-plagued races.
In recent weeks, the political world has finally become familiar with
the bow-tied Irish American Republican candidate for New York State comptroller.
Heretofore unknown Chris Callaghan now has a fighting chance against incumbent
Democrat Alan Hevesi, only because Hevesi is mired in a scandal over his
use of a state employee to chauffeur his ailing wife.
Callaghan, who refers to his Irish roots in speeches and literature, is
still seen as a sub-par candidate, but is in a much better position to
compete then he was before the Hevesi scandal exploded.
Incidentally, it was Callaghan who initiated the charges against Hevesi,
by reporting the potential misuse of taxpayer funds on a voter hotline
that Hevesi himself set up.
Also in the headlines for unfortunate reasons is Buffalo Congressman Tom
Reynolds, a member of the Irish American Republicans group and chairman
of the National Republican Congressional Committee.
It was in that leadership role that Reynolds came under fire when the
Mark Foley scandal broke. Congressman Foley has been accused of sexually
propositioning young political assistants in Washington. Reynolds has
since apologized for not doing more about Foley’s behavior.
Reynolds may still eke out a win. He too is quoting O’Neill these
days.
“I believe all politics is local,” Reynolds said last week.
Congressmen Peter King and John Sweeney are two more New York Republicans
with ties to the Irish community who are fighting tough re-election battles.
Sweeney, a Republican who comes out of an Irish American union background,
has been targeted as vulnerable by Democrats because of President Bush’s
sinking poll numbers in Sweeney’s upstate district.
A New York Times analysis in the summer said that Sweeney was “on
the defensive,” but he’s expected to win, and remain a power
player in state politics where he’s famous for pulling no punches.
He may even run for governor down the road.
Earlier this year, Sweeney was involved in a nasty feud with New York
Governor George Pataki loyalist Patrick McCarthy, who some accused of
assisting Sweeney’s Democratic opponent Kirsten Gillibrand.
King is also expected to win, though he could perhaps do without editorial
endorsements such as the one he received from the New York Post this week,
which said, “King’s days as the Irish Republican Army’s
go-to guy on Capitol Hill seem long gone.”
Democrats, meanwhile, still have hopes for Chris Murphy in Connecticut.
A 32-year-old state senator, Murphy has run a tougher-than-expected campaign
against 12-term Republican incumbent Nancy L. Johnson.
In the end, the Irish Catholic vote is so pivotal because it is no longer
reliably Democratic.
As Steve and Cokie Roberts note, “If Catholics flirt with their
old flame, they’re not ready to go steady with the Democrats. As
Bush focused this fall on the threat of terrorism, his ratings soared
with this critical swing vote.”
Polls open next Tuesday at 6 a.m.
(Contact Sidewalks at tomdeignan@earthlink.net.)
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