Is Conservatism Dead?
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From the New American Is Conservatism Dead? |
Written by Patrick Krey
Tuesday, 06 January 2009 00:57
The rise of the neoconservatives within the GOP has not only discredited
the Grand Old Party but tarnished the image of conservatism.
The Republican party suffered an overwhelming electoral defeat this past
November. The establishment media were all too quick to proclaim that
conservatism is dead and we're now at the dawn of a liberal age. Peter
Beinart, Senior Fellow for U.S. Foreign Policy for the Council on
Foreign Relations (CFR), wrote in Time magazine that we are facing the
dawn of a "new liberal order."
In making this proclamation, Beinart overlooks the fact that the public
was not voting for President-elect Obama, but rather against Republicans
like John McCain and George W. Bush. But what was it that Bush and the
Republican Party have come to symbolize? Bush and McCain both stood for
an activist foreign policy of globally spreading democracy, never-ending
commitments of nation building, open borders at home, record deficit
spending, circumventing the Constitution, expanding domestic welfare
programs, and nationalizing the financial sector.
Conservative South Carolina Governor Mark Sanford wrote in a CNN
commentary that "Republicans have campaigned on the conservative themes
of lower taxes, less government and more freedom �" they just
haven't governed that way. America didn't turn away from conservatism,
they turned away from many who faked it."
Constitution Party candidate Chuck Baldwin wrote, "For all intents and
purposes, conservatism �" as a national movement �" is
completely and thoroughly dead. Barack Obama did not destroy it,
however. It was George W. Bush and John McCain who destroyed
conservatism in America."
David Boaz of the libertarian CATO Institute explains that Bush
"delivered massive overspending, the biggest expansion of entitlements
in 40 years, centralization of education, a floundering war, an imperial
presidency, civil liberties abuses, ... and finally a $700 billion
bailout of Wall Street that just kept on growing in the last month of
the campaign. Voters who believed in limited government had every reason
to reject that record."
These modern Republican policies have nothing to do with traditional
conservatism, but have much more in common with big-government
liberalism. So how did politicians claiming to be conservatives end up
acting like big-government liberals? The explanation lies in
understanding the rise of neoconservatism, which has come to define
modern conservatism and the GOP.
Modern American Conservatism
The modern American conservative movement is considered to have begun in
1953 with the publishing of The Conservative Mind by Russell Kirk. With
this book, Kirk traced the evolution of the conservative ideology from
the American founding to the early 20th century. Conservatism, Kirk
proclaimed, was based on the core principles of "an enduring moral
order, the Constitution of the United States, established American way
of life, and a free economy." Conservatism, as Kirk and similar
traditionalists of his day saw it, meant an adherence to the
Constitution and a mind-our-own-business foreign policy. These
conservatives were opposed to an activist foreign policy, weary of
executive power, and hesitant to engage in war. Kirk praised the late
Senator Robert A. Taft for his ability to recognize that "war was the
enemy of Constitution, liberty, economic security, and the cake of
custom."
Conservative ideology developed and morphed through the years. It had
internal conflicts between Rockefeller Republicans, followers of Nelson
Rockefeller who held liberal views, and Goldwater conservatives,
supporters of Barry Goldwater who adhered to a strict interpretation of
the Constitution. This struggle went back and forth, with the liberal
wing electing Richard Nixon and the conservative wing electing Ronald
Reagan. Over this period, the liberal wing began to gain more power
within the establishment right centered inside our nation's capital
beltway. It wasn't until the 1970s when the neoconservatives (neocons
for short) joined the conservative movement with their own distinct
radical beliefs involving a hyper-interventionist foreign policy. Their
influence within the movement would grow through the following decades,
eventually culminating in George W. Bush's administration.
Neocons as Big-government Globalists
So what is it neocons believe in? Neocons are not concerned with
reducing the size of government and are actually quite content with it
getting bigger. Justin Raimondo, author of Reclaiming the American
Right: The Lost Legacy of the Conservative Movement (the book that
inspired Ron Paul to run for president), writes, "On the domestic front,
far from opposing the growth of Big Government, or even seeking to slow
it down, the neocons want to utilize the centralizing federal apparatus
to achieve their own 'conservative' ends."
President Bush exemplified this big-government conservatism more than
any other modern Republican. Fred Barnes, the author of the pro-Bush
Rebel in Chief, explains that "big government conservatives are
favorably disposed toward what neoconservative Irving Kristol has called
a 'conservative welfare state.' (Neocons tend to be big government
conservatives.) ... Bush has never put a name on his political
philosophy, though he once joked that it was based on the premise that
you could fool some of the people all of the time and he intended to
concentrate on those people." Keep in mind that Barnes is actually
speaking favorably about Bush. He highlights the misplaced priorities
between traditional conservatives and neocons.
While big-government programs might be part and parcel of neocon
agendas, it is foreign policy that is at the heart of their ideology.
Max Boot, another admitted neocon and CFR senior fellow, explains: "It
is not really domestic policy that defines neoconservatism. This was a
movement founded on foreign policy, and it is still here that
neoconservatism carries the greatest meaning." Boot contends that
America should be the world's policeman.
This foreign policy is far from the noninterventionist one recommended
by America's Founders of avoiding entangling alliances and pursuing
peace and commerce. Instead, it is an aggressive, costly and dangerous
policy of America policing the globe in order to establish a new
democratic order without regard to any U.S. national interest. Of
course, constant war goes hand in hand with this scenario. Raimondo
writes, "Indeed, warmongering is the very essence of neoconservatism."
Neocons' Leftist Origins
Neocons were former liberal war hawks, many of whom were intellectuals,
who felt disenfranchised by the Democratic Party's embrace of the peace
movement. The neocons decided to jump ship and join with the
Republicans, in whom they felt they would have a more receptive audience
for their internationalist agenda. They were welcomed with open arms by
the Rockefeller Republicans and other members of the beltway right.
Traditional conservatives were not enthused by these new arrivals, but
they felt that a new group of intellectuals would add gravitas to the
movement.
Neoconservative thought represents an ideology with more similarities to
Trotskyite communism than traditional American conservatism. Writing in
the Weekly Standard, Irving Kristol, who is widely considered to be the
godfather of neocons, freely admitted that neoconservatism originated
"from disillusioned liberal intellectuals in the 1970s." Kristol himself
is an admitted former Trotskyite. Trotskyism is the theory of Marxism
named after Leon Trotsky, who strongly supported an international
socialist revolution and asserted that socialism could only come into
being on a global scale. Kristol was the managing editor of Commentary
Magazine from 1947 to 1952, which is referred to as the neocon bible.
Kristol is also the father of William Kristol, founder of the Weekly
Standard. William Kristol, part of the second generation of neocons, is
considered to be one of the leading voices of the movement.
Neocon Michael Ledeen, contributing editor for National Review,
explained his leftist roots in an interview and said, "I describe myself
as a democratic revolutionary, I don't think of myself as 'conservative'
at all."
In the book Where the Right Went Wrong: How Neoconservatives Subverted
the Reagan Revolution and Hijacked the Bush Presidency, Pat Buchanan
explains:
The first generation were ex-Trotskyites, socialists, leftists and
liberals who backed FDR, Truman, JFK and LBJ. When the Democratic Party
was captured by McGovern in 1972 �" on a platform of cutting
defense and 'Come Home America!' �" these Cold War liberals found
themselves isolated and ignored in their own party. Adrift, they ran
over to the Republican Party and were pulled aboard as conservatism's
long voyage was culminating in the triumph of Reagan.
The Rise of the Neocons
Many neocons played important supporting roles in the Reagan
administration. Neocons appointed by Reagan include William Bennett,
Jeanne Kirkpatrick, Richard Perle, Eugene Rostow, Carnes Lord, and
Elliott Abrams. This is not to say that neocons ran the administration.
As a matter of fact, the neocons had many differences of opinion with
President Reagan about foreign policy. Neocon Norman Podhoretz,
editor-at-large for Commentary Magazine, then wrote an essay entitled
"The Neoconservative Anguish Over Reagan's Foreign Policy."
The neocons were considered a helpful constituency in the conservative
movement at the time, but they were just one constituency in a much
larger movement. The neocons were not content with this arrangement and
had hoped that they would gain more power in George H.W. Bush's
administration. William Kristol served as chief of staff to Vice
President Dan Quayle and expressed optimism about neocon leadership of
the first Bush White House.
Russell Kirk, still highly regarded in conservative circles at the time,
expressed reservations about neocon leadership. Kirk was wary of the way
neocons had "been rash in their schemes of action, pursuing a fanciful
democratic globalism rather than the national interest of the United
States." He also did not believe that George H.W. Bush would give in to
neocon pressure. Kirk said, "It is a reasonable presumption that Mr.
Kristol and certain of his colleagues would prefer to install in the
White House some person, not at all a fine gentleman, who might be
deviously manipulated by neoconservative ideologues. Mr. Bush has far
too much practical experience of federal office to be so managed by the
'first-class academic "brain trust" ' that Mr. Kristol desires to
establish in the White House." Apparently, Kirk overestimated George
H.W. Bush and did not even consider the future ascendancy of his son who
would turn out to be "open to devious manipulation" by the neocons.
The neocons were elated with the advent of the first Gulf War as the
elder Bush assumed the role of the liberal internationalist they had
been hoping for. Kirk would become extremely disillusioned with the
president over the decision to intervene. Kirk chided the president for
initially engaging in war for an "oil can," referring to the rationale
of keeping open the Kuwaiti oil fields, and he famously derided Bush for
his eventual explanation for going to war: to launch a "New World
Order." "What are we to say of Mr. Bush's present endeavor to bring to
pass a gentler, kinder New World Order? Presidents Woodrow Wilson,
Franklin Roosevelt, and Lyndon Johnson were enthusiasts for American
domination of the world. Now George Bush appears to be emulating those
eminent Democrats. When the Republicans, once upon a time, nominated for
the presidency a 'One World' candidate, Wendell Willkie, they were sadly
trounced. In general, Republicans throughout the twentieth century have
been advocates of prudence and restraint in the conduct of foreign
affairs." Kirk was so upset with the Gulf War and the change in
direction of the conservative movement that he wrote to a friend
expressing his opinion that Bush should be strung up on the White House
lawn for war crimes!
As always, neocons came down on the opposing side of Kirk's traditional
conservatism. To them, it was not Bush's globalist intervention that
betrayed the conservative movement, but it was his failure to fully
complete the job of regime change in Iraq. The neocons grew
disillusioned with the elder Bush for not being enough of a liberal
interventionist. The neocons felt betrayed by the president's decision
to leave Saddam in power. They spent most of the '90s establishing new
publications and think tanks to promote their viewpoints. The neocons
also made a conscientious effort to more closely influence powerful GOP
politicians like Newt Gingrich and John McCain. The neocons also worked
to increase their influence with the right-wing media. Media
personalities like Rush Limbaugh became closely aligned with top neocon
thinkers. The flagship magazine of the beltway right, National Review,
purged traditional conservatives in favor of neocon-approved GOP
partisans.
You could say the neocons never met a foreign intervention they didn't
like. They praised the Clinton administration whenever it took any
globalist action but then criticized it for not going far enough. The
neocons were fervent supporters of Clinton's efforts to expand NATO.
They applauded the bombing of Belgrade but decried the lack of ground
troops. In 1997, William Kristol and Robert Kagan, a CFR neocon and
contributing editor to The New Republic, co-founded the Project for a
New American Century (PNAC). PNAC is a neoconservative think tank that
promotes higher military spending and an increased role for America as a
global policeman. In 1998, PNAC issued a letter to President Clinton
urging regime change in Iraq. Even though Clinton pushed deadly
sanctions against Iraq and continual bombing raids, the Monica Lewinsky
scandal made it politically difficult to fully implement PNAC's policy
recommendations. The neocons wouldn't have to wait long before a
politically viable reality for Iraq regime change developed.
Neocons Finally Dominate
It was in the administration of George W. Bush that neocons finally came
to fully occupy the driver's seat. The 9/11 terrorist attacks gave the
neocons the opportunity to push their long-held view of a global
democratic revolution to the mainstream. Was George W. Bush a neocon? If
he wasn't, he did one great impression. Some neocons feel that Bush was
a true believer. Neocon Richard Perle has said of Bush: "The President
of the United States, on issue after issue, has reflected the thinking
of neoconservatives." The neocons got almost everything they wanted from
Bush, most importantly the Iraq invasion.
Bush appointed many neocons to his administration, and he didn't hide
the fact that he employed many neoconservatives. While giving a speech
at the American Enterprise Institute (AEI), an influential Washington
think tank founded in 1943 and known as the headquarters of
neoconservative thought, President Bush told the audience, "You do such
good work that my administration has borrowed 20 such minds."
Even with all the obvious failures of the Bush administration, the
Republican faithful still continued their disastrous love affair with
the neocons by picking McCain as their 2008 presidential candidate. John
McCain's close relationship with the neocons dated back to the '90s when
they both broke ranks with the GOP to support the intervention in
Kosovo. McCain also had many prominent neocons advising his campaign.
When it came to foreign policy, McCain used all the neocon talking
points on the campaign trail. McCain's foreign policy positions seem
like they were lifted straight off PNAC's website.
Now the neocons are blaming everyone but themselves for McCain's defeat,
and they are making suggestions that have little to do with the reality
of the voter rejection of the GOP. David Frum, the neocon speechwriter
for Bush who coined the term "Axis of Evil," claimed that picking social
conservative Sarah Palin was the reason for the loss and recommends that
the GOP should lessen its opposition to abortion and gay "marriage."
Frum says this despite the fact that exit polling showed that McCain
might have lost by an even larger margin without Palin to draw in social
conservatives. William Kristol claimed that Bush was too laissez faire
and the GOP needs to become more interventionist on economic policy.
Kristol says this despite the fact that Bush was nowhere close to
laissez faire and employed an interventionist economic policy throughout
his years in office. Bush himself seems out of touch with reality. In an
interview with Charles Gibson, he explained that the biggest
disappointment was not the neocon foreign policy but, rather, the
failure to crowbar amnesty for illegal immigrants through Congress! He
also said that the landslide November defeat was not because of him but
because of voter dissatisfaction with the Republican Party. And why were
they dissatisfied? Bush did not explain.
Post-neocon Conservative Movement?
What will be the future of the post-Bush conservative movement? It is
tempting to heap all the blame on the neocons as an aberration in the
conservative movement, but the troubles run deeper than that. Neocons
have so completely infiltrated the conservative movement that it's hard
to distinguish between true neocons and establishment conservatives.
Most of the Republicans who supported the Iraq invasion were not
Trotskyite fellow travelers but rather knee-jerk partisans who were all
too willing to accept the neocon consensus trumpeted by party leaders
and the beltway right media of Sean Hannity and Rush Limbaugh.
Individuals who consider themselves traditional conservatives should
reject the voices of both GOP party leaders and members of the media who
promoted Bush's brand of conservatism. Instead they should listen to the
voices of constitutional conservatives who stood by principle over party
in opposition to Iraq and other unconstitutional actions by the
big-government Bush administration. Voices like Ron Paul, Pat Buchanan,
Charles Goyette, and organizations like the John Birch Society as well
as The New American magazine.
The mainstream media (MSM) also played a role in assisting the neocons
dominating the GOP. Big-government conservatives who are close with the
neocons, like Lindsey Graham and John McCain, are praised as pragmatic
centrists and moderates by the establishment media, whereas true
constitutionalists and traditional conservatives like Ron Paul or Pat
Buchanan are considered extreme or fringe and are ignored altogether.
The MSM is all too eager to employ a neocon as their organization's
in-house conservative, thereby redefining conservatism as
neoconservatism. Bill Kristol became an op-ed columnist for the New York
Times in January 2008 even though almost all of his Iraq predictions
proved false. Jon Stewart even kidded with him, asking, "Oh, Bill
Kristol, are you ever right?" It is far past time to reject this
media-concocted paradigm and expose the true extremists: those who would
indebt future generations and pursue dangerous and unconstitutional
policies of endless war.
If conservatives continue to identify with the failed Bush policies,
then the conservative movement is dead as we know it. On the other hand,
if true traditional conservatives, following in the footsteps of Russell
Kirk or Ron Paul or Pat Buchanan, acknowledge the failures of Bush and
the neocons while renewing their dedication to the U.S. Constitution,
the conservative movement's obituary might be premature. As for many of
the knee-jerk GOP partisans who became staunch supporters of the
neocons? They'll quickly fall in line with the new constitutional
coalition just like they did with Bush and the Iraq War.
Patrick Krey, M.B.A., J.D., L.L.M., is a lawyer and freelance writer
from New York.
Photo: AP Images
http://www.thenewamerican.com/usnews/election/644
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