Posted on 11/10/2014 12:35:47 PM PST by Kevin C
The 2016 race for the White House has already gotten started, ABCs Shushannah Walshe suggested today, and it looks like Dr. Ben Carson is first in the ring. Carson, Walshe records, first became a conservative star when last year he created a buzz at the National Prayer Breakfast when in front of an audience that included President Obama and Vice President Biden he spoke out about political correctness, health care and taxes.
My colleague Jay Nordlinger likes to gripe that you should run for president is uttered far too swiftly on the right nowadays, the injunction tending to follow almost every instance of public-facing conservative competence. A man has made an impressive speech, full of critiques of which you approved? He should be president! A governor is doing well in a state that is usually run by the other side. Shouldnt he be our commander-in-chief? We have someone in the legislature who is fluent in fiscal policy? Lets remove him from his area of expertise and put him immediately into the White House. More often than not, it has to be said, this happens with minorities and with women the tendency serving perhaps as the Republican partys own form of affirmative action. If we could just parachute this gifted black man into a position of prominence, the thought goes, our image problem would be solved.
This proclivity is not entirely unwise, of course. Washington D.C.s insider culture is certainly a real problem, and the abundance of career politicians and wannabe lobbyists does render substantial retrenchment unlikely. On occasion, we really do need outsiders to shake things up. But there are talented political newcomers and there are mavericks and then there are rank amateurs and flavors of the month, and the difference between these two types is the difference between a Dwight Eisenhower or a Rudy Giuliani and a Herman Cain or a Donald Trump. One would like to imagine that the prospect of an unknowns being held up as the face of a centuries-old party and a timeless political movement would set loud alarm bells ringing in the ears of those who characterize themselves as conservatives. That for so many it does not is troubling indeed.
As a rule, we on the right like to tell ourselves that we are steadfastly opposed to heroes in politics, and that we are especially opposed to heroes who promise that their election to the executive branch will result in sweeping changes or in a post-partisan utopia. The United States, we argue, was set up in opposition to princes and to aristocrats, with the express recognition that politics will always be with us and with the explicit understanding that the influence of individual players would be strictly limited by the system. Long before anybody in the wider electorate so much as knew Barack Obamas name, this instinct was a virtuous and a sensible one. But if we have learned anything from his presidency, it is just how prudent that conviction was. Somehow, however, the hope that a shining knight will come to save the republic from itself remains common within conservative circles. What gives?
I suspect that the impulse is in part the product of the way in which the Right sees politics. On Wednesday, Reihan Salam quoted Noam Scheibers invaluable observation that, unlike interest groups on the left, which tend to accept the transactional nature of government, many movement conservatives have a genuinely coherent worldview they want to see reflected in its entirety. This is correct, and to an extent I am among them. An ugly consequence of this, however, is that individuals who line up with a given conservatives worldview tend to be held up by that conservative as a rarity and as a savior as an unimpeachable superhero who will not compromise in the face of identity politics or elite pressure and whose elevation to power will immediately stop the ratchet from moving ever leftward. Those who doubt this should see what happens when one criticizes Sarah Palin or Ron Paul. Right-leaning politicians who differ on a few important issues, by contrast, are quickly dismissed as traitors or sellouts or fake conservatives. To witness this process in action, consider just how far Marco Rubio has fallen in the affections of many who once greatly admired him. Rubio, who has an impressively conservative voting record and a generally winsome character, erred on the question of immigration last year. Did this error transform him in the eyes of the Republican base into a fair prospect with some unlikable traits? Or did this make him an unconscionable turncoat who should never have been elected in the first place? For too many, Im afraid, it is the latter.
This inclination helps to explain why Ronald Reagan is so chronically misremembered, too. Reagan was an unquestionably great man, who, like Margaret Thatcher in Britain, not only helped to turn around the prospects of his own country but played a key role in freeing millions of foreigners who had been brutally enslaved by the Soviet Union. Cometh the hour, cometh the man, as the old saying goes. And yet, despite the common implication of those who revere him, Reagan was by no means a perfect president, and there is some truth to the common progressive jab that he would not get through a Republican primary today. For a start, Ronald Reagan compromised far, far more than conservatives at the time wanted him to to the extent that some here at National Review considered him to be a failure. He signed an amnesty that we now regard as having been a disaster. He raised taxes when he thought it necessary. He signed gun-control bills, including one that outlawed the importation of automatic weapons. And, famously, he made deals with Mikhail Gorbachev that were slammed by many on the right as being little more than appeasement. It is all very well for conservatives to say, If only Ronald Reagan were president, but in doing so they have to take the rough with the smooth and to remember, too, that Reagan did not achieve as much as he did because he was a superman, but because he was part of a more general shift.
All in all, the Reagan era was an expression of changed public sentiment as much as it was the product of an especially capable president. At no point in Ronald Reagans tenure did Republicans control the House, and for six years of his time in office the Democratic party had a majority in the Senate. Despite this, he changed the country for the better and reset the ideological presumptions of the electorate for a generation perhaps more. Dr. Ben Carson is a remarkably accomplished man, and I am thrilled that he is on my side rather than my opponents. But not everyone who is remarkable should be given the keys to the country, and not all who are with me on most of the issues are ideally suited to represent me. A good man wants to run for the presidency? Fair enough. Lets hear him out. But perhaps we might cool it a bit before we build him a statue.
Charles C. W. Cooke is a staff writer at National Review.
Found my hero! Dr. Ben Carson.
But I am going to say that we have had the best example of what true leadership is, and it is time for us to become the leaders.
We need to become Ronald Reagan.
Is this supposed to soften us up for Jeb or Christie? Nice try, but futile.
Conservatives don’t want heroes. They want leaders who will lead to the right, not the left.
I am not looking for a damn HERO. I am looking for a person who loves America, appreciates the Constitution and works in the best interest of the American people, idiot Cooke person.
Go sit in the corner buddy.
Fixed the headline. J.C. Watts, Herman Cain, now Ben Carson. Dr. Carson is a fine man, but does anyone really believe if he were a white MD with the same resume anyone would be taking him seriously?
I’m not looking for a hero.
I’m looking for a qualified conservative presidential candidate who is deserving of my support.
Ben Carson might just be that candidate.
BUMP
Apparently a bigger problem is staff writers searching for topics to write about.
Conservatives aren’t hunting for heroes. They are hunting for conservatives. Finding candidates who can make an intelligent and honest defense of conservatism, as well as put conservatism into practice and win elections is a chore of heroic proportions, but it isn’t a hero hunt.
We are the ones we’ve been waiting for.
Reagan was a hero and he managed the impossible, the man known as a true right winger almost defeated a sitting president for the nomination in 1976, and then defeated a sitting democrat president in 1980, and changed the world in spite of the hate from the media and the GOP.
It is a true conservative that can win elections and defend conservatism, that we are looking for.
“we on the right”
The thing is, we should never have a designated “leader”, we should be like the TEA Party
We have had these types, i.e., Thomas Jefferson, Teddy Roosevelt and Ronald Reagan. May we live to see another one (or more) as president.
It was actually Alan Keyes, J.C. Watts, Condi Rice, Alan West, Herman Cain, Star Parker and Dr,. Ben Carson with an attempt to also bring T.w. Shannon to the fold among others.
Conservative? Yes. But qualified?
That remains to be seen. It is why I said “might be” in my post.
What you said. Sounds like another National Review republiweenie is all up and sideways over what conservatives should want.
Find: “Cruz”.
No matches found.
< / NR >
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.