A seemingly befuddled Chris Matthews on Tuesday interviewed former
Senator Arlen Specter, gleefully (and incorrectly) referring to the
Democrat as a Republican. Downplaying the fact that Specter
switched parties, Matthews bellowed, "Your party has become a right-wing party."
After mentioning the plight of Charlie Crist, who was defeated by Marco
Rubio in a Republican senatorial primary, Matthews shrieked, "He lost
the Senate race because he contacted [hugged] the President physically
once. This is what is going on in your party."
Again, the Republican Party is not
Specter's party. Just getting warmed up, Matthews complained, "And so
the party of Lincoln has became the party of Strom Thurmond, hasn't it?"
[MP3 audio here.]
The forgetful Matthews apparently is unaware that Thurmond rose to
prominence as a Democrat, that he spent 39 years as a Democrat.
Regarding Matthews' comment about Crist and his hug of President Bush,
perhaps the MSNBC host has similarly lost track of the fact that
liberals excoriated Joe Lieberman for "kissing" George W. Bush.
The never-subtle host railed against Rick Santorum's regret over
supporting Arlen Specter: "And now we have inquisitions in the
Republican Party...And that's all these guys do now. Anything that
sounds moderate or reasonable."
Making the whole conversation more odd, Matthews did inform viewers at
the beginning of the segment that Specter was no longer a Republican:
"Arlen Specter was a member of that [moderate] wing for many years
before switching parties in 2009." He then seemed to immediately forget.
A partial transcript of the March 20 segment, which aired at 5:30pm, follows:
CHRIS MATTHEWS: So, what does the strength of Rick Santorum's candidacy
say about the state of Republican Party? What's become of the moderate
wing of the GOP? Arlen Specter was a member of that wing for many years
before switching parties in 2009. He served alongside Rick Santorum as a
fellow senator from Pennsylvania for 12 years. Senator Specter, welcome
to Hardball.
ARLEN SPECTER: Nice to be here.
MATTHEWS: Someday we could have been debating, but here we are
discussing civilly. Let me ask you this: You were a classic moderate
Republican, the kind I grew up with. Hugh Scott, John Heinz. They were
all over the place, Jack Javits, Keating, all over New England. They're
all gone, practically. Olympia Snowe just quit. Orrin Hatch is even
being threatened as a liberal, as a moderate. Your party has become a right-wing party.
SPECTER: No doubt about it, the moderates have been exiled. You have
someone with a 93 percent conservative rating like Bob Bennett. He is
not- He is not pure enough. Mike Castle loses to a woman who has to
declare herself to be a witch [sic]. And when Olympia Snowe and Susan
Collins voted against disclosure of these corporate and union
expenditures, there's no moderate left on the Republican side of the
United States Senate.
MATTHEWS: And so the party of Lincoln has became the party of Strom Thurmond, hasn't it? Is that too rough?
..
[On Santorum regretting his endorsement of Specter]
MATTHEWS: Welcome to the Star Chamber. And now we have
inquisitions in the Republican Party. You have to recant like in a
medieval church. You have to say, "I did not believe that. That wasn't
my proud moment. That wasn't me." And that's all these guys do now.
Anything that sounds moderate or reasonable. You know, Charlie Crist
hugged the President and he lost his seat. He lost the Senate race
because he contacted the President physically once. This is what is
going on in your party.
...
MATTHEWS: Well, I'll say it now. You as a moderate Republican fit
Pennsylvania like a glove for 30 years. There is such a thing as a state
that likes having moderate Republicans like you and Tom Ridge and Jack
Heinz and Hugh Scott and the northeast should represented by moderate
Republicans.
SPECTER: Yeah, but the moderates left the Republican Party when the
Clinton-Obama race came up in 2008, 200,000 moderate Republicans left.
-- Scott Whitlock is the senior news analyst for the Media Research Center. Click here to follow him on Twitter.