Kiss-Kiss, Bye-Bye: The HWPC Gives Up by L. Brent Bozell III April
22, 1997
Quiz time: This group was small. It was based in southern
California. Its beliefs were outside the mainstream. It drew a flurry of news
coverage when, recently, it ceased to exist. Can you identify it?
No, it's not Heaven's Gate - but close. The correct answer
is the Hollywood Women's Political Committee, the hyperfeminist show-business
PAC which doled out almost $6 million to liberal candidates since 1984. The
HWPC folded its Armani tent on April 12 with the typically self-righteous huff
that it "will no longer collaborate with a system that promotes the
buying and selling of political office." True, the organization had long
supported campaign finance reform, and, as leftist columnist Robert Scheer
pointed out, is the only PAC ever to testify before Congress in favor of
outlawing PACs. Nonetheless, it managed to collaborate with the system just
fine when the Democrats controlled Congress; had the HWPC bought and sold
political office more successfully, it most certainly would have remained in
the business.
Members admit that they, in the words of former HWPC
executive director Margery Tabankin, had become "increasingly alienated
as the political debate in both parties has tilted rightward." Now we're
getting closer to the truth. The HWPC's shrill, hardcore brand of liberalism
wasn't popular when the group formed, and it's even less popular today. Its
1985 statement of principles condemned "the myth of a balanced budget as
an excuse to dismantle the social agenda of this country" and opposed
"any attempt... to interfere with a woman's absolute ownership and
control of her own body."
The HWPC peaked early, in September 1986, when Barbra
Streisand hosted, and performed at, a fundraiser for Democratic Senate
candidates which raked in an estimated $1.5 million. Two months later, the
Democrats 89 pro-abortion march and rally in Washington. Glenn Close, Susan
Sarandon, Cybill Shepherd, and many other big names took part. By contrast, at
the last major liberal shindig in Washington, NOW's "Rally for Women's
Lives" in April 1995, the stars were Sharon Gless and Tyne Daly, many
years past their "Cagney and Lacey" fame.
In Ronald Brownstein's Los Angeles Times article on the
HWPC's demise, he quotes a member as saying, "We have always had this set
of?principles we were trying to organize around, and what finally became clear
to us was that until the [campaign finance] situation was dealt with, we were
never going to get anywhere." Success to the Hollywood Women's Political
Committee, then, is defined as a government takeover of the political campaign
process. Surely that's in keeping with its philosophy; surely that's a reason
for the GOP to resist.
Voice Your Opinion!
Write to Brent Bozell
Home | News Division
| Bozell Columns | CyberAlerts
Media Reality Check | Notable Quotables | Contact
the MRC | Subscribe
|