The GOP’s sad, intolerant 2012 field (The Week)

New York – At the weekend’s Values Voters Summit, Republican presidential candidates and conservative kingmakers proved that bigotry is among their chief values

There’s a good reason for the otherwise inexplicable reality that in most surveys President Obama, despite his currently desiccated job approval ratings, leads all but one of his Republican rivals — and even against him, the president nonetheless runs neck and neck.

And there’s a deeper reason, beyond the inchoate, predictable, and perennial yearning to find an alternative, why so many of the GOP’s smartest strategists and most prodigious fundraisers fought so hard to broaden their field of candidates. They sought someone else, anyone both serious and authentic  from Indiana’s diminutive but economically literate Gov. Mitch Daniels, who once committed the conservative capital offense of contemplating a tax increase, to New Jersey’s blunt, at times bullying, and comprehensively heavyweight Gov. Chris Christie, who believes in the heresy of global warming.  

Those who looked elsewhere were implicitly confirming the judgment of the public at large. In the probable nadir of the Obama years, Americans feel overwhelmingly that the country is on the wrong track, but they think the GOP has the wrong candidates. In fact, there’s hardly a plausible president in the current lineup, which

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