Timothy McNulty | March 30, 2009
We've known all along that this Arlen Specter reelection race is going to be fun. (It already is: his early announcement last week about opposing card-check was the first unexpected turn.) Check out all the juicy stuff in this Inquirer story about a conservative conference in Harrisburg this weekend, including anonymous attack flyers about guv candidate Pat Meehan, the Messiah-like treatment of Pat Toomey, alleged double crossing of Senate candidate Peg Luksik, and the need for men to hit each other with sticks:
In a keynote address to the group, Toomey fell short of a formal
announcement, but he fired up a crowd of about 600 with a denunciation
of the government's "lurch to the left." The passion to topple Specter
even spilled over into the part of the program dedicated to hearing
from three likely Republican candidates for governor.
First, an anonymous attack flier on all the tables listed former U.S.
Attorney Pat Meehan's connections to "Liberal Benedict Arlen." Then,
during a question-and-answer period, several audience members demanded
to know where each candidate stood on the primary.
"We have our own situations we're worried about," joked Rep. Jim
Gerlach (R., Pa.), who said he was there to discuss gubernatorial
issues. State Attorney General Tom Corbett also passed.
"I'm not going to duck the question," Meehan said, adding that he had
worked for Specter and would probably vote for him, though he does not
always agree with the incumbent. "I'm sure he can stand on his feet and
defend his record, as we are, and we should be judged on our own
individual records," Meehan said. He earned a round of respectful
applause from parts of the room.
The conference brought together activists from different elements of
the conservative movement: homeschoolers, creationists, antiabortion
groups, business interests, small-government libertarians. Organizers
said this year's attendance was a record.
Earlier, Toomey said that Specter had to go because he had been complicit in programs that violated GOP small-government ideals.
"Now I don't often quote Barack Obama . . . but in this case I'll make
an exception: It's time for change," Toomey told the crowd. "I believe
that a Republican senator from Pennsylvania ought to stand up for the
commonsense conservative principles that are at the heart of the
Republican idea, that really are at the heart of the American dream."
He ran against Specter in 2004, coming within 17,000 votes of toppling him.
Toomey was preaching to the choir in the ballroom at the Four Points Sheraton in Harrisburg.
"The biggest problem I have with Arlen Specter is he's not defined,"
said Lou Petolicchio, an activist from Myerstown, in Lebanon County. "I
can't trust where he's coming from. I don't know who he is. For the
first four years of a term, he votes like Ted Kennedy, then for two he
tries to show he's a Republican."
Peg Luksik, an antiabortion activist who ran for governor three times
in the 1990s, already is in the race against Specter. She spoke on a
panel about pro-family policies, and told reporters she would stay in
the race. Some conservatives said they needed to rally around the one
candidate with the best chance of winning, to avoid splitting the
anti-Specter vote.
Luksik, 53, said that Toomey told her directly in February that he was
not going to run against Specter and instead would try for governor.
Some of her backers have suggested that Luksik was double-crossed, but
she said yesterday that she would not regard Toomey's reversal as a
betrayal.
"Believe me, I have five boys, so I understand that these two men have
a long personal and rather vindictive history, and that there's a real
desire for the two of them to go and hit each other with sticks,"
Luksik said. "I get that."
Nearly everyone at the conference was wearing a Toomey for Senate button, the P-G's Tom Barnes notes.
Posted
Mar 30 2009, 10:08 AM
by
Timothy McNulty