Roy Moore’s Republican Senate candidacy in Alabama is facing a precarious future. GOP senators have abandoned him in droves; the National Republican Senatorial Committee has ended its relationship with Moore’s campaign; and yesterday, the Republican National Committee scrapped its field operation in Alabama in advance of the Dec. 12 special election.
Moore and his allies, however, have a survival strategy, and it came into focus last night at the Walker Springs Road Baptist Church in Jackson, where the right-wing candidate, accused of sexual misconduct towards teenagers, delivered extemporaneous remarks.
Describing a nation in spiritual decline — Moore lamented the end of government-sponsored prayer in public schools — the GOP candidate complained, for example, that the government “started creating new rights in 1965.”
Moore didn’t elaborate, but it’s worth noting for context that Congress approved the Voting Rights Act in 1965, a year after passing the Civil Rights Act of 1964. Neither law was popular in Alabama. [Update: 1965 was also the year the Supreme Court issued its ruling in Griswold v. Connecticut, which said women had a right to access contraception through a right to privacy.]
In case that was too subtle, this was less understated.









