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The Death of Conservatism? - 43 Mistakes and the GOP's Dobson's Choice
Sideshow Bob | January 29, 2008 | Sideshow Bob

Posted on 01/29/2008 11:55:19 AM PST by Sideshow Bob

There have been more than a few recent articles and editorials attempting to affix blame for the demise of the Republican Party. Peggy Noonan blames President Bush. Rush Limbaugh believes a McCain nomination will kill the party. However, even in a worse case scenario, the Republican Party will probably stagger along for several years much like the last decade of the Whigs. Conservative Republicans should probably be more concerned about the impending demise of the conservative movement within the party. Some individuals can be blamed more than others, but this folly has many fathers. The latest blow to conservatives has come from within – thanks to Dr. James Dobson and other egotistical evangelicals. Political doomsayers may be correct and it is likely too late to save the conservative movement in 2008. Conservatives can correct their path to destruction for 2010 and beyond, but only if they look back at recent history, recognize the actions and actors that have brought the party and movement to this point, and to learn from a long series of missteps and mistakes.

Ronald Reagan built a winning coalition of conservatives, independents and establishment moderate Republicans in 1980. A coalition of social, economic and security conservatives had come together to form a plurality within the GOP and wrest leadership of the party from the establishment, moderate GOP. The Iran-Contra scandal (Mistake #1) weakened the coalition and the moderate wing of the party regained control of the GOP (Mistake #2), which led to the election of President George H.W. Bush (Mistake #3).

While the elder Bush had adopted – albeit reluctantly – many conservative ideals, he and the moderate GOP leaders advocated a “kinder, gentler” approach (Mistake #4). Conservatives might have been content to take a back seat to moderate GOP leadership, but they read Bush’s lips and their support and enthusiasm for the Republican Party evaporated after the Bush tax increase (Mistake #5). In 1992 some conservatives were taken in by Ross Perot and his anti-establishment, anti-Washington message (Mistake #6). Others just stayed home (Mistake #7) and helped Democrats elect the Dope from Hope, Bill Clinton, with just 43% of the popular vote (Mistake #8).

The only positive to come out of 1992 was that it helped create an opening for an obscure, but brilliant Congressman from Georgia to lead conservatives to regain control of the Republican Party. Newt Gingrich reformed the three-legged conservative coalition and took an upstart innovative approach of leading the GOP from the House with a 1994 national congressional campaign platform – the Contract with America.

It is important to note that prior to the ’94 elections, Senate Minority Leader Bob Dole and other establishment, moderate GOP leaders scoffed at and were dismissive of Gingrich and the Contract. Dole and Senate moderates rode the Contract’s election coattails, but made it plain that the GOP Senate did NOT sign on to the program, was not obligated to it, reluctantly followed Gingrich's lead, and worked to water down each and every one of the Contract's provisions (Mistake #9).

By January 1996, Dole was the presumptive Republican presidential nominee (Mistake #10). Dole sought to convince Speaker Gingrich to fold up the federal government shutdown stalemate with President Clinton and allow Dole to lead the GOP via his presidential campaign.

Dole gave Gingrich the choice of single-handedly continuing the shutdown and fight with Clinton and the media with Candidate Dole seeking a different path from the House GOP or deferring to Dole's presidential campaign and resuming the conservative battle together with Gingrich’s friend Trent Lott to keep President Dole honest after the ’96 elections. Gingrich made the wrong choice (Mistake #11). Gingrich probably should have run for President himself in 1996 (Mistake #12).

We all remember what happened. By caving in and compromising on the shutdown, the conservative House leadership lost some of their ability to control their more moderate members (Mistake #13). Bob Dole lost (Mistake #14). Trent Lott built his own voice separate from the House (Mistake #15). And with no help from Lott & the GOP Senate and a Clinton veto looming on all conservative issues, Gingrich, Armey & DeLay focused too much of their efforts on the growing Clinton scandals (Mistake #16).

Gingrich was able to maintain order within the House even during the Clinton impeachment. But after the Senate RINOs failed to do their duty and convict Clinton (Mistake #17), the House moderates began feeling their oats (Mistake #18).

Then, the impact of the missing FBI files took effect. Allegations of marital affairs Gingrich and Hyde took their toll (Mistake #19). Seeing his conservative House coalition slowly diminish and Lott's desire to set on a different path, Gingrich stepped down as Speaker (Mistake #20). Then his presumed successor, Bob Livingston from Louisiana, was also taken out by a marital affair (Mistake #21).

House Moderates became emboldened and championed the lackluster Dennis Hastert as Speaker to muzzle Armey & DeLay and appear less confrontational (Mistake #22). This effort also helped to clear the agenda of party leadership for the 2000 GOP presidential candidates (Mistake #23). And in 2000, conservatives settled for the "compassionate conservatism" of George W. Bush (Mistake #24). Many conservatives stayed home, nearly costing Bush the presidency and actually losing GOP control of the Senate in 2000 (Mistake #25).

To be fair, conservatives should thank God everyday for W's leadership in dealing with 9-11. But Bush also squandered the opportunity to push the party and country to the right following that horrible event (Mistake #26). The GOP regained control of the Senate in 2002, but based solely on the country’s fears of Democrats’ inability to deal with national security concerns and not on conservative social and economic principles. Meanwhile, the House drifted further to the center (Mistake #27).

Conservative fears of repeating Florida 2000 helped Bush win reelection in 2004, despite the party's overall drift to the center. By now, any conservative elements in the House and Senate were in complete retreat. The moderates ruled the roost in both houses. RINO defections on the Iraq war (Mistake #28), wasteful earmarks (Mistake #29) and ethics scandals (Mistake #29) were now front and center for the GOP. The only conservative victories of 2005-06 were the confirmations of Roberts and Alito to the Supreme Court. And it took a battle to defeat Bush on his nomination of Harriet Miers to do it.

By Fall 2006 conservatives had become utterly disheartened. Attempts to make the Bush tax cuts permanent stalled (Mistake #30), the continued treachery of Arlen Spector, John McCain, Lindsey Graham and the Gang of 14 (Mistake #31), increased dissatisfaction with George Bush and the Miers nomination debacle all caused conservatives to stay home in November 2006 (Mistake #32). And the GOP lost both the House and Senate.

Occasionally, the conservative movement can still rise up. The reaction to the Amnesty bill was encouraging. But other than that, conservatives have again been wandering in the wilderness. GOP moderates and RINO's have been resistant to allowing a conservative to assume leadership in Congress. And any potential conservative congressional leader has held back (Mistake #33), in part due to the extremely early start of the 2008 presidential race (Mistake #34).

And what did conservatives get for 2008 GOP candidates? Were there any Reagan conservatives who possessed all three legs of the coalition stool - strong national defense, social conservatism, economic conservatism?

Nope.

Instead, we got Rudy Giuliani. An autocrat who has little affection for social conservatives, but pledged to nominate strict construction judges. Whoopee!

Instead, we got John McCain. An angry RINO maverick who enjoys flouting social and economic conservatives AND even the GOP establishment to gain favor and positive reviews from the liberal media.

Instead, we got Mitt Romney, an uber-wealthy GOP establishment moderate. At least Romney panders to social and economic conservatives with recently discovered flip-flopped positions on issues of importance to those two factions.

Instead, we got Mike Huckabee – the Dope from Hope, part II. While he is just as slick and manipulative as Bill Clinton, Huckabee is nowhere near as smart.

Instead, we got Ron Paul, a true blue, libertarian nutbag. Paul has a few economic bona fides that have pulled away a few non-nut job libertarians. But I'm sorry, Dr. Paul is a kook.

Instead, we got the Obscure Four - Tom Tancredo, Alan Keyes, Tommy Thompson & Duncan Hunter. Tancredo & Keyes are single issue candidates. Tommy & Dunc are well-rounded politicians (especially Hunter), but they lacked the ability to have broad nationwide appeal.

Seeing this morass of blech, Fred Thompson entered the fray expecting to be the savior of the Republican Party and the conservative movement. Fred should have been that candidate.

Unfortunately, Dr. James Dobson and a few evangelical leaders decided to cut off their nose to spite their face (Mistake #35). You see, Fred's not a Bible thumper. Neither was Ronald Reagan. And like Reagan, Fred is a bona fide, all-around, federalist conservative. That wasn’t good enough for Dobson. And when Fred refused to kiss Dobson's ring of evangelical purity, Dobson went shopping for a candidate he thought he could control.

Flim Flam Huckabee seized on that opportunity. Huckabee played Dobson into thinking that Dobson could be a GOP kingmaker (Mistake #36). A handful of evangelical leaders blindly pushed Huckabee as a viable conservative (Mistake #37). The media, who knows a GOP loser when they see one, helped fan the flames of Huckabee's support. For a time, the scheme worked. Huckabee won Iowa (Mistake #38), but eventually the truth of Huckabee's Christian Socialism became evident to most conservatives.

But the damage had been done. Social conservatives were now spilt. Some had been taken in by Huckabee's class warfare (Mistake #39). Some had been taken in by the media's false depiction of Fred as a lazy campaigner (Mistake #40) and settled for Romney, Rudy or, worse, McCain (Mistake #41).

Added into this deceptive mix was the ability of independents and Democrats to participate in and distort the Iowa, New Hampshire & South Carolina Republican primaries (Mistake #42). Media darling McCain was back! McCain – the new Comeback Kid – was ready to lead....the GOP down to defeat. Meanwhile, Fred's race and the ability for the GOP to unify behind a Reaganesque conservative died (Mistake #43).

At best, the GOP could still end up with a George W. Bush-lite nominee like Mitt Romney. He will at least pretend to care about conservative ideals from his Country Club wing of the party.

At worst, the GOP could end up with John McCain. McCain, the perennial thorn in the GOP's side who was once touted as a possible VP running mate for John Kerry!

Who knows? It’s still remotely possible that none of the moderates and RINO’s still in the presidential race will win a majority of the primary delegates. Maybe a conservative nominee could still rise up in a brokered GOP convention. Maybe a conservative national congressional campaign like the Contract with America could still arise in time for the 2008 elections. But really, that’s a fantasy.

The reality is that conservatives will have to wait until 2010 or 2012 to reassert itself as the true and legitimate leaders of the Republican Party. The reality is that conservatives have allowed numerous people to make numerous mistakes which have led the movement to this precarious point. The reality is that conservatives and the GOP are now left with this Dobson's Choice of Romney or McCain. Pass the nose clips and prepare for the worst.


TOPICS: Editorial; Your Opinion/Questions
KEYWORDS: 2008; 2008campaign; 2008election; campaign; conservatives; dobson; fred; fredthompson; gop; jamesdobson; presidential; shadowparty; soros; votefraud
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To: Sideshow Bob

Sorry Bob, calling people names is not “hating the sin”.


401 posted on 01/30/2008 9:40:04 AM PST by westmichman ( God said: "They cry 'peace! peace!' but there is no peace. Jeremiah 6:14)
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To: Halgr; westmichman; Theophilus
but I strongly doubt that there is anything I could say that would convince you the error of your world view.

you can count on it....these folks are pretty much one-note Johnnies on Christian Conservatism...just take some time to scan their comments history.

To them, Evangelicals all take their marching orders from Dobson or whomever

this is the same bunch who smears Huckabee for where he is from, how he speaks, that he prays, etc. and yet has the audacity to then call Dobson a bigot for questioning the depth of Thompson's Christianity

they are hypocrites.

Fred, whom I supported large....probably exponentially more than they did....lost because he ran a poor campaign. He snatched defeat from the jaws of victory. A fact, I sure regret.

I could see this very early in the smears on Huckabee here. The origin was anti-Southern Protestant and an exercise largely in regional chauvinism. Not to say Huckabee was not fair game over his immigration stances and populist rhetoric. But many of the most vitriolic posters on this could have been found as south bashers and Christian conservatism bashers here for years. This is what they do and Huckabee gave them a nice target.

So now I guess they prefer McCain. I'm not crazy about any of them.

This thread once again proves the old observation here that folks really don't objectively address each topic. They utilize available topics/issues to further their own inherent prejudice. I rarely see exceptions to this. I guess it's human nature.

402 posted on 01/30/2008 9:42:07 AM PST by wardaddy (Political Correctness is to Western Culture what the Aids virus is to the cake community)
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To: westmichman

OK, black pot.


403 posted on 01/30/2008 9:42:43 AM PST by Sideshow Bob (McCain's general election loss will rival the defeats of McGovern and Mondale!!!)
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To: Huck

Well said.


404 posted on 01/30/2008 9:44:19 AM PST by redangus
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To: PFC

We should never forget the Bushbots coverall answer that it was part of his strategy.


405 posted on 01/30/2008 9:47:10 AM PST by redangus
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To: NavVet
Funny, those things you mention don’t seem to be hurting McCain. Divorced under ugly circumstances, authored McCain Feingoll etc., I don’t pictures of McCain coming out of Church every Sunday, but Dobson didn’t trash him and here we are?

From January of '07, long before his opinion on Fred:

WorldNetDaily.com: Dobson says 'no way' to McCain candidacy

The reason McCain is not being injured is because his support does not come from Conservatives.

406 posted on 01/30/2008 9:56:41 AM PST by roamer_1 (Conservative always, Republican no more. Keyes '08)
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To: Sideshow Bob

First look at the demographics of the 2004 Election

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Political_ideologies_in_the_United_States

Social Conservatives are only 11 percent of the voting population. I can only guess at bow many are evangelical christians.

Some say that there are between 30 and 40 million of us in America...I think that number is high. Lots of times, presbitarians and unitarians et el get classified somehow as evengelicals when that is far from the truth.

Now Dobson is vocal and the press seeks him out, and he speaks his mind....BUT ITS JUST HIS OPINION

You are attempting to blame the fall of the contemporary republican party on one man.

Silly thinking really.

Fred did himself in.

There is NO ONE that can be targeted as the straw that broke fred’s back except Fred.

Frankly I agree with Peggy Noonan, Bush himself has done more harm to the republican party than all others combined....he tricked us evangelicals then years later said point blank that “ALL FAITHS WORSHIP THE SAME GOD”

Then Bush said the “Constitution is just a God-Damned Piece of Paper????”

Naaaa, your vendeta against Christians and ONE of their Spokesperson’s (Dobson) is a circular and strawman argument....

Plus, your Know this is FReepers and that many of us are Evangelicals and you come up with this Garbage looking for a fight?????

This “Vanity Post” is CLASSIC TROLLING of the highest order.

Go somewhere where you will have influence....it certainly won’t be here.


407 posted on 01/30/2008 10:15:00 AM PST by Halgr (Once a Marine, always a Marine - Semper Fi)
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To: NavVet
...And btw, just in case anyone has been drinking the koolaid:

BenedictonBlogson:Rumours of Dobson’s Huckabee endorsement ‘vehemently denied’

WorldNetDaily: Dobson camp denies Huckabee endorsement

408 posted on 01/30/2008 10:16:41 AM PST by roamer_1 (Conservative always, Republican no more. Keyes '08)
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To: the808bass
That is a fair enough argument. I'm not opposed to a DOMA. I see it as dead in the water, though.

I agree. Fred agreed. Dobson just wanted to be pandered to. Fred wouldn't do it. And that's what brought us to where we are at right now. Makes you cry, doesn't it?

409 posted on 01/30/2008 10:41:45 AM PST by NurdlyPeon (Former Thompson/Hunter, now Romney (I guess).)
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To: Halgr
Naaaa, your vendeta against Christians and ONE of their Spokesperson’s (Dobson) is a circular and strawman argument....

Plus, your Know this is FReepers and that many of us are Evangelicals and you come up with this Garbage looking for a fight?????

This “Vanity Post” is CLASSIC TROLLING of the highest order.

Go somewhere where you will have influence....it certainly won’t be here.

I don't disagree with Noonan (or you) with regard to George W. Bush and the harm he has caused to the GOP and conservatism. (FWIW, I was not a supporter of W's coronation in the 2000 nomination process - I was a Forbes supporter. This would be documented in my FR posts from back then)

I find it mildly amusing to be accused of "evangelical bashing" in 2000 for not supporting Bush and again in 2008 for not attacking Bush while being an evangelical myself the entire time.

I DID NOT blame the fall of the contemporary GOP on one man. I seem to recall 43 other mistakes listed in my "trolling" vanity analysis of what has led the GOP and conservatives to this point.

I DID say that Dobson's attack on Fred was the most significant recent incident to bring us to this point of having no remaining viable conservative candidates and helping to lead us to the unsavory choice of either Mitt Romeny (Bush-lite) or (shudder) Juan MCCain. But again, it's just one of 44 points.

There is a marked difference between critically-thinking FReeper evanglegicals and the Bible thumpers and egotistical evangelical leaders referenced in my analysis. I'm sorry I didn't devote an extra paragraph to assuage the hyper-sensitivities of certain evangelical respondants to my post. I will note that the distinction was more clearly stated repeatedly and throughout the response thread by other FReepers and myself.

With regard to trolling - I think my 10 year record of posting is a strong refutation of that charge. I must be the deepest mole since Aldrich Ames.

And as for the slur that my opinion having no audience or influence at FreeRepublic, 400+ responses to a vanity post would suggest otherwise. And if you don't like my "trolling" post, don't read it and don't respond to it.

410 posted on 01/30/2008 11:17:18 AM PST by Sideshow Bob (McCain's general election loss will rival the defeats of McGovern and Mondale!!!)
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To: NurdlyPeon
I agree. Fred agreed. Dobson just wanted to be pandered to. Fred wouldn't do it. And that's what brought us to where we are at right now. Makes you cry, doesn't it?

Exactly. Why is that so difficult for some on this thread to comprehend?

411 posted on 01/30/2008 11:19:25 AM PST by Sideshow Bob (McCain's general election loss will rival the defeats of McGovern and Mondale!!!)
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To: Halgr
Please see http://www.freerepublic.com/forum/a383068ac0c85.htm

State of the Conservatives - We're All Clintonites Now

Conservatism Opinion (Published) Keywords: BUSH, FORBES, REPUBLICAN, CONSERVATIVE
Source: National Review
Published: November 22, 1999 Author: Ramesh Ponnuru
Posted on 11/15/1999 12:10:20 PST by Sideshow Bob

Does the conservative movement need to take some lithium? As the Washington Post's Thomas B. Edsall recently observed, over the last five years its mood has swung from giddy optimism to despair and back again. The arc can be traced in the pronouncements of individual conservatives. Less than a year ago, Bill Bennett was despairing of the American public's moral insipidity, as evidenced by its conspicuous lack of outrage at Bill Clinton's misconduct. Now he blesses George W. Bush's efforts to put a smiley face on the Republican party. Some of the same conservatives who were broaching the subject of justified revolution a few years ago have fallen behind the Texas governor as the unlikely leader of their insurrection.

These changes of mood are neither surprising nor particularly unhealthy. They reflect changed circumstances, for one thing. After several years of watching congressional Republicans play Wile E. Coyote to the president's Road Runner — their every trap exploding in their faces — conservatives can now look forward to each morning's newspaper, with its fresh revelations of the Gore campaign's incompetence.

Besides, mood swings are notoriously part of growing up. The 1994 Republican sweep left conservatives with a foolish and self-destructive, but also quite understandable, sense of their invincibility. People who believe in their inevitable triumph, of course, inevitably get their comeuppance — after which their grand expectations may curdle into excessive disillusionment. Attaining a majority, for a movement no less than for a teenager, involves moving to a third stage, in which the difficulties and imperfections of adult life inspire neither denial nor despair.

The real trouble with the conservative mood is not that it is mercurial. It is that it may be delusional. To support Gov. Bush as the best candidate available to conservatives would be one thing. It is quite another to describe him as the son of Ronald Reagan rather than of his actual father, as some conservatives have come close to doing. The overrating of Bush's conservatism (and of his electability, for that matter) is part of a general overrating of conservatism's prospects, even as it is evidence that those prospects are in fact not good.

Whatever they may say, conservatives know in their bones that their position is weak. Fear, after all, not confidence, is what motivates the stampede toward Bush — a stampede in which conservative voters as well as GOP hierarchs have participated. A lot of conservatives seem not to want to hear a word of criticism of the governor, much less a debate.

What these conservatives sense is that, at a level of politics deeper than the fortunes of the political parties, the ground is shifting away from them. What they have not noticed is that the 2000 election is shaping up to be a ratification not of conservatism but of Clintonism — and will be so even if the Republicans win.

Dick Armey, speaking to the Heritage Foundation on October 13, took a different view: "I can honestly tell you that, more than at any time in my life, our ideas and policies are on the rise." He has a case. Nobody believes in the planned economy, or wage and price controls, anymore; the budget is in surplus, inflation low, welfare reformed. The movement for school choice is enjoying its first halting successes. Almost as many Americans are now willing to call themselves "pro-life" as "pro-choice." In last year's elections, the Democrats came in third (getting only 18 percent of younger voters) in Minnesota — the land of Walter Mondale, Eugene McCarthy, and Hubert Humphrey. This, mind you, was amidst what was generally seen as a liberal resurgence. Social democrats may be in power throughout the industrialized world, but they have no choice but to implement a conservative program, however slowly and reluctantly.

If this optimistic case is to prevail, Bill Clinton's successes must be explained away as having nothing to do with his unconservative politics. They must be attributed to the accident of a booming economy and stock market, Clinton's freakish political talents, a biased press, Republican missteps, and a hundred other things. Many of these explanations have merit. Yet even taken together, they seem inadequate. It is revealing that conservatives often seem to suggest that Clinton has cast a spell on the public and that the Congress is too cowardly to resist him — revealing because this is an explanation that comes uncomfortably close to the one liberals had for Ronald Reagan's success in the 1980s.

Liberals took a long time to recognize that Reagan's success had anything to do with what he stood for; even today, many people place more stress on "the Reagan demeanor," as Armey did in his speech. (Gov. Bush, he said, "embodies" this demeanor: "Like Reagan, he is sunny, he is optimistic, and, yes, he's compassionate — because he recognizes that conservatism, like America itself, is inherently sunny and optimistic and compassionate." Where does one begin?) Just as liberals were unwilling to concede that Reagan's policies were popular — and my apologies to him for this comparison — conservatives are making the same mistake about Clinton.

And even when the substance of Clinton's politics is credited for his success, it is usually misunderstood. The press, and those Republicans who take their cues from it, has deduced that Clinton stands for a combination of social liberalism and economic conservatism; that this mix of tight money and loose morals is extremely popular; and that savvy Republicans such as Bush are tailoring their politics to suit this fashion.

This consensus is pretty much false from top to bottom. If social conservatism is dooming the Republicans, why has every major social-conservative initiative of the Republican Congress passed by lopsided, bipartisan majorities? The ban on partial-birth abortion passed the House 295-136, and the Senate 63-34. The anti–gay-marriage bill: 342-67 in the House, 85-16 in the Senate.

The kernel of truth within the consensus is that Clinton does indeed favor abortion-on-demand and oppose nationalizing the banks. But these are not exactly pressing issues for most voters. And to them, Clinton looks much more socially conservative than the Democrats of old. The political weakness of post-'60s liberalism was its perceived excesses on issues of race, crime, sex and family, and work. Clinton systematically addressed each vulnerability: He dissed Sister Souljah, came out for the death penalty, opposed same-sex marriage, and pledged to end "welfare as we know it." The end of the Cold War aided this project by ending a set of debates that had reinforced liberals' image as weak, unrealistic, and unpatriotic.

As Ben Wattenberg put it in the title of a book Clinton studied, "values matter most." Freed from the responsibility of defending social liberalism, Clinton was able to go on offense over the issue of government activism for the middle class. The battle over Medicare was the biggest issue on this front, but Clinton proposals on health, education, child care, etc., gave voters something at every stage of their lives, from cradle to grave. Government activism was no longer subverting widely cherished values, but supporting the values of family and security — a strategy I've dubbed "values statism." It is this solicitude for middle-class values and interests, and not a reputation for compassion toward the downtrodden, that is behind the success of Clintonian liberalism.

To say that the Left has abandoned the most damaging parts of its creed is to say that the Right has won on all the things the public cared about: crime, welfare, racial militance, anti-Americanism, overt hostility to religion. But this does not mean that somehow conservatives are "winning the debate" generally. People who see victory in the fact that Clinton agrees with us on such matters as the undesirability of a 70 percent tax rate forget that it also means that we agree with him. If our victories are all victories that Clinton can applaud or at least accept, to say that we are winning is, in a way, to say that we are all Clintonites now.

This seems to be a depressingly accurate description of all too many Republicans. They're not talking about closing the Commerce Department anymore, or even the National Endowment for the Arts. It was a Republican, Bill Paxon, who first proposed that the federal government finance the hiring of 100,000 teachers. Some of the most conservative Republicans in Congress are supporting bills to regulate health insurance. The Republican governors, for their part, have been much worse on spending than the Congress, and that spending is going to the familiar Clintonite priorities of health, education, child care, etc.

And what of Gov. Bush? Most observers of the primaries have made a hobby of tracking his supposed attempts to distance himself from the social Right. But this project can be sustained only by refusing to hear what the governor is saying. The fact is that while Bush has criticized conservatives such as Robert Bork for what he considers excessive pessimism, he has not retreated an inch on policy. He is comfortable with the current Republican platform language on abortion; he has not given up the possibility of someday passing a Human Life Amendment. True, he doesn't talk much about these issues, but in what way is this a departure from previous Republican candidates? Neither Bob Dole nor Bush's father talked much about the moral issues either. When Bush does talk about them, he is often more eloquent than either of those two — admittedly, no Ciceronian feat.

Bush's attempts to distance himself from the Right have never taken the form of denouncing "intolerant" social conservatives who want to "impose" their views on our morally pluralistic populace. He has criticized the "destructive mindset" that says "that if government would only get out of our way, all our problems would be solved." This "approach," he says, has "no higher goal, no nobler purpose, than 'leave us alone.'" In another speech, Bush said, "Too often, my party has confused the need for limited government with a disdain for government itself."

What Bush is repudiating, in theory and practice, is not social conservatism but economic conservatism, or more precisely libertarianism. Bush's apparent and, according to his spokesmen, unintentional slap at Judge Bork drew a lot of ink. Less remarked was his earlier swipe at Grover Norquist's notion of a "leave-us-alone coalition." The leave-us-alone slogan had driven neoconservatives — such as Mike Gerson, who wrote Bush's lines, and Bill Bennett and Gertrude Himmelfarb, who gave advance approval to some of them — up the wall. What Bush thinks he is accomplishing by taking up cudgels for them is unclear.

Bush makes a reasonable point when he notes that disdain for government does not necessarily serve the cause of limited, effective government. It's a lot harder to make the case that the Republican domestic program has been too antistatist. The Republican "revolution" of 1995, which proposed merely to keep the growth of federal spending to $350 billion over seven years, was hardly the anarchist riot Bush's rhetoric implies. Antigovernment fervor surely does not describe today's Congress, which has increased funding for many of the programs those revolutionaries sought to terminate.

Bush's turn away from libertarianism, however, cannot be dismissed as merely rhetorical overkill. In no area has Bush called for a substantial retrenchment of federal activity. His focus has been on how government can be used to further a "private-sector" War on Poverty. And Bush is hardly alone in abandoning limited government as an important practical goal. John McCain quickly seconds every philosophical pronouncement the governor makes. Pat Buchanan is far more interested in using government to promote his ends than in cutting it down to size. Gary Bauer, in a more modest and principled way, has left the economic-conservative fold on taxes, Social Security, and trade. Libertarian ideas are in retreat in the conservative intellectual world, too.

All of these moves are motivated, essentially, by the fact that antistatism doesn't have much of a constituency in American politics. Or to put it another way, libertarians don't pull their electoral weight within the conservative coalition. That's why values statism has been so successful. And that's what Bush and McCain, in particular, are responding to. It's not that there is a huge constituency for a big-government conservatism; it's that Republicans who have given up on limited government have to come up with something else to talk about.

If Republicans don't know how to beat values statism — and if the public hates political argument, as it surely does — the obvious response for Republicans is to co-opt and defuse, turn down the volume on the issues, and run on personality. Which is to say, to attempt to win within the confines of Clintonism, thus solidifying it as a national consensus.

Large portions of the GOP, especially the business class, are quite content with such a strategy. The party now reflects the business class's view of the world more thoroughly than at any other point since Ronald Reagan's nomination in 1980. That class is hostile to ideological crusades. Mindful of "diversity," it is especially hostile to crusades against racial preferences (as are Bush and McCain). It does not feel guilty about the poor, but thinks it ought to feel guilty; hence "compassionate conservatism" appeals to its sentimentality. The triumph of the business class within the GOP is not a wholly bad thing, but there's no reason to dress it up as some profound philosophical advance for conservatism, as some writers are attempting to do.

The libertarians, bless their apolitical hearts, mostly have no idea that they're losing ground. Ed Crane, president of the Cato Institute, sees clearly that compassionate conservatism is aimed squarely at people like him. Many libertarians, however, are pleased by the mistaken belief that it is aimed at social conservatives. And some libertarians are toying with the idea that they should ally with liberals rather than conservatives, the theory apparently being that it's more important to defend their precious right to clone themselves than to privatize Social Security.

Should social conservatives care about the eclipse of libertarianism? Marvin Olasky, a prominent religious conservative and a Bush adviser, is not worried. He told The New Republic, "Let's throw away the budget cutters. I see that coming with Bush. I see that as part of a governing alliance." The weakness of libertarianism, however, weakens moral conservatism too. First, as a simple matter of coalition politics: Religious conservatives are not a silent majority of the public, as they have sometimes imagined, but a large minority, and therefore they need allies.

More important, the abandonment of limited government as a goal leaves social conservatives without some of their best ideas — indeed, with no serious and achievable agenda. To revive the stigma against socially disruptive and immoral behavior will require a rollback of the antidiscrimination laws that make it impossible for employers and landlords to punish such behavior. Free-market pressures will have to be brought to bear on the schools to break the lock that liberals have on the education of our children. It will be difficult to promote thrift and prudence while advertising for state lotteries, treating bankruptcy lightly, maintaining generous welfare benefits, and bailing out banks whenever they make foolish loans to Third World countries.

Or take modern health care. Through a complex array of policies, the federal government and state governments have been socializing costs for years. Since this causes costs to explode, health-care administrators feel increasingly compelled to contain costs by discouraging some behaviors (such as smoking tobacco) and encouraging others (such as euthanasia and abortion). Thus does public policy promote the replacement of the old morality by a new one. And this is to say nothing of the financial fraud and the whiny sense of entitlement that these policies also abet.

If the welfare state has undermined traditional virtues, and not just among the underclass, it seems quixotic to attempt to revive them without reining in the welfare state. Social conservatives would be left making ineffectual symbolic gestures (such as keeping outspoken social liberals from becoming ambassadors), or calling for the impossible (such as strict censorship). Without limited government as a lodestar, moreover, social conservatives will be tempted to pursue the dead end of Buchananism.

The lack of a mass constituency for limited government, then, has been profoundly debilitating for conservatives. And it has left them holding a remarkably weak hand for 2000. The Republican presidential primaries (including the run-up to them) have been one of the main pressure points conservatives have in American life. The bureaucracy, the courts, the media, the universities, Hollywood, the foundation world, the publishing houses: All are dominated by opponents of conservatism, and as previously mentioned, corporate America is hardly the bastion of conservatism the Left takes it to be. The primaries are therefore all the more important. Yet conservatives are being marginalized. Their organizations — from the NRA to the Christian Coalition, from the Family Research Council to U.S. Term Limits — are in varying degrees of disarray and enjoy less influence than they did only a few years ago.

It must be said that Bush has not taken many actual positions at odds with antistatist conservatism; his innovation has been a matter more of tone, emphasis, and language. Bush has, indeed, run a more conservative campaign than he has had to. That, in a way, is the point: What's striking about this primary pre-season is how little Bush has been tugged rightward by conservative organizations or rivals. (Scott Reed, Bob Dole's campaign manager, has wistfully remarked that his candidate had no such luck.) Movement conservatives have been unable even to mount serious presidential candidacies. Phil Gramm at least limped into the Iowa caucuses in 1996. This time around, the only conservative candidates with any elective experience — John Ashcroft and Dan Quayle — have already dropped out. Worse, conservatives have no champion on the horizon for 2004.

Rather than ask why this is so, those conservatives who have noticed have preferred to indulge in escapist fantasies. The campaigns of Gary Bauer and Steve Forbes look likely to marginalize the worthy causes for which both men have fought so valiantly. It is a sad performance. And whatever Bush's own position on the ideological spectrum, as a very practical politician he will respond to the correlation of forces indicated by that performance.

None of which means that it makes no difference who wins the 2000 election; it will make a difference, on everything from foreign policy to the courts to taxes. The inexorable victories conservatives foresaw just a few years ago should not be replaced by a vision of inevitable decline. Conservatism may not be "inherently sunny," even in America, but neither is it despairing. Conservatives can have a bright future if they find a way to swell the constituency for limited government, using any tool that happens to be at hand (very much including Gov. Bush). The rise of the investor class is a hopeful sign, if a largely unexploited one. Conservatives will achieve nothing, however, unless they first look closely at the state of their movement, without sentiment or illusion.

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Best analysis I have read on the current state of the Republican Party.

1 Posted on 11/15/1999 12:10:20 PST by Sideshow Bob
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412 posted on 01/30/2008 12:38:52 PM PST by Sideshow Bob (McCain's general election loss will rival the defeats of McGovern and Mondale!!!)
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To: Sideshow Bob

The people that don’t comprehend the serious nature of what Dobson did are, well, uncritical thinkers, and, I suspect largely Huckerster supporters -— you know, the kind who know the Huckster is a “pinko” but support him because “he is one of us.”

Dobson (spurred on, IMHO by Gingrich) intentionally attacked Thomspon; to what end, who knows?


413 posted on 01/30/2008 12:41:08 PM PST by MeanWestTexan (At kaki metumtam, Rudy McRomnabee)
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To: Sideshow Bob

I’d rather be a black kettle.


414 posted on 01/30/2008 1:29:49 PM PST by westmichman ( God said: "They cry 'peace! peace!' but there is no peace. Jeremiah 6:14)
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To: westmichman
I’d rather be a black kettle.

***

(sigh) If it will make you happy, fine.

415 posted on 01/30/2008 1:33:15 PM PST by Sideshow Bob (McCain's general election loss will rival the defeats of McGovern and Mondale!!!)
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To: Sideshow Bob

I’ll give up my smile when they pry my cold, curled up, dead lips down.


416 posted on 01/30/2008 1:42:00 PM PST by westmichman ( God said: "They cry 'peace! peace!' but there is no peace. Jeremiah 6:14)
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To: ejonesie22
"Who would you suggest..."

I go for the conservative.

417 posted on 01/30/2008 1:51:21 PM PST by Designer
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To: BoBToMatoE

Bingo, we have a winner...


418 posted on 01/30/2008 1:52:52 PM PST by Robbin
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To: Designer

That does narrow it down, but who specifically.


419 posted on 01/30/2008 2:04:33 PM PST by ejonesie22 (Haley Barbour 2012, Because he has experience in Disaster Recovery.)
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To: Tennessee Nana
Romney or McCain...either way we get AMNESTY

Bush didn't give us amnesty, and he had 8 years to do it. Amnesty doesn't come from the President, it comes from Congress. If Congress had sent amnesty to Bush, he would have signed it. So really, whoever turns out to be President will have very little to say about it. The upside of electing McCain as President is we can get him out of the Senate. And I wouldn't feel that bad about Hillary getting the blame for the country going to hell in a handbasket if I wasn't just a little sympathetic to those poor Secret Service agents that will have to carry her bags.

420 posted on 01/30/2008 2:09:39 PM PST by webheart
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