Certain-kind-of-family guy
Kirk Dillard mixes his messages about family
DYSPEPSIANA | James Krohe Jr.
When I want to learn what a
politician thinks, I read what she writes. When I need only to learn
what a politician says he thinks, I listen to him speak. Here’s why.
Republican governor wanna-be Kirk Dillard ventured an opinion to a radio
reporter last week about what kind of people ought to inhabit the
Executive Mansion in Springfield. “I really believe that for our state’s
image and just the way that a governor thinks, you need a first family,
in a traditional sense, back in the governor’s residence,” he told
Chicago’s WLS.
I
really believe that for our state’s image you need a person who can
speak English, in a traditional sense, back in the governor’s residence.
Dillard made his remarks several days ago, and I have been busy ever
since trying to figure out what he meant.
Several
commentators were certain they had it figured out. “Traditional family”
is Republican code for the one-man-one-woman-one-pairof-pants “normal”
family that they believe populates the real America. Dillard’s choice of
the term therefore was taken as a cowardly slur on two of his likely
opponents for governor in 2014 – the incumbent Mr. Quinn, who tried to
make a marriage and failed, and GOP state treasurer Dan Rutherford, who
(in the opinion of some) has failed by never trying.
Dillard
seems a nice guy, but Republicans seem remarkably careless with their
words when they refer to any group that wouldn’t have been on a TV
sitcom in 1963, be they gays or women or wetbacks. (Oops! Now they’ve
got me doing it.) Dillard opposes the idea of gay marriage on family
grounds, believing (quoting from the Thomas More Society, whose brief
against samesex marriage Dillard endorsed) “the marriage structure that
helps children the most is a family headed by two biological parents.”
Gay
people of course can be biological parents, but I don’t want to confuse
a Republican argument with facts, so I will say only that I am willing
to accept Mr. Dillard’s word that his use of “traditional” was not an
attempt at libel, but was intended merely to describe families that are,
well, just like his. The Dillards comprise Dillard and his wife, the
mother of their two daughters (9 and 11), who all live in one house,
presumably with at least one loveable dog.
The problem is that families like the Dillards and I apologize for using
this next term about Republicans – are a minority. The U.S. Census
tells us that in 2010, only 21 percent of Illinois’ 4.8 million
households consisted of two adults with children of their own under 18.
Not that you’d expect a Hinsdalian to know that. In 2010, 48.2 percent
of households in that leafy west suburban retreat consisted of two
married people with children under 18 living with them. Perhaps, like so
many Republicans, Dillard does his sociological research by walking
around his block.
Dillard
told Bernie – you know who Bernie is – that he meant to say what he has
said many times in the past, which is that Illinois needs a Republican First
Family in the Executive Mansion. That makes sense if he means that
Illinois needs a Republican family in the mansion because that would
mean Illinois’ governor would be a Republican. But why not just say that
Illinois needs a Republican in the mansion? Why drag his family into
it? I must assume it’s because he wants people to know he likes
families. Well, so do the gay couples who are raising adopted kids or
having children via surrogates. So do childless people who are devoted
aunts and uncles. So do blended families, and divorced couples sharing
custody, and grandparents raising the kids their own kids can’t, and ….
But of course Dillard didn’t mean those people. He’s not that much
of a family guy. He’s a certain-kind-of-family guy. But that still
doesn’t explain why he thinks the next governor should have a family,
period. To WLS he said it was “for our state’s image and just the way
that a governor thinks.” Having a family doesn’t seem to have helped Mr.
Dillard think very clearly about the state’s image. Is the fact that a
bachelor is in the mansion why Moody’s downgraded State of Illinois
bonds the other day? I would have thought that who is in the mansion
doesn’t matter as much to a bond analyst as how often he is in the
mansion. Did Blago make himself a national laughingstock because he left
Patti and the kids back home in Rogers Park?
I’m
kidding. I don’t really think that Dillard thinks that. He’s not dumb,
even if he sometimes says dumb things, or rather he says things in dumb
ways. He later tried to explain that having two parents and kids in a
house teaches a guy how “unbelievably busy families are.” “Busy” is not
the word I would use to describe working families who have as many jobs
as they have kids, including the single parent. Exhausted. Harried.
Frightened. Angry maybe, at a Republican Party that wants to help them
by freeing them from day care and food stamps and unemployment
compensation and public transit and safe workplaces. But like I said,
he’s a certain-kind-of-family guy.
Contact James Krohe Jr. at krojr@comcast.net