This just in: Ronald Reagan is dead and he's not coming back. Now, can
conservatives please move on?
Reagan always spoke about the future and its possibilities. Today's
conservatives, however, can't seem to break with the past and the nostalgia
for the Reagan years. Even in his letter to the American people in 1994 in
which he revealed he suffered from Alzheimer's disease, Reagan wrote of his
"eternal optimism" for the country's future. Too many modern conservatives
seem embedded in a concrete slab of pessimism, preferring to go over a
bridge and drown rather than "compromise" their "principles." If you can't
get elected, your principles can be talked about on the lecture circuit, but
are unlikely to be adopted in Washington.
John McCain, some say, is not a true conservative. Was Reagan? Reagan
campaigned as a tax cutter. He cut taxes, but he also raised them. He
promised conservative judges and spoke of his opposition to abortion, yet
named two justices to the Supreme Court (Sandra Day O'Connor and Anthony
Kennedy) who voted to uphold Roe v. Wade. Against the advice of some, Reagan
deployed Marines to Lebanon and saw them murdered by a homicide bomber.
Reagan engaged in an arms-for-hostages deal with Iran. As president, Reagan
seldom went to church, unlike his evangelical base. If conservatives knew in
advance these things about Reagan, would they have voted for him in such
numbers?
Contemporary conservatism has mostly been about saying "no" to the liberal
agenda. Suppose conservatives instead begin to circumvent liberals by
applying better ideas to achieve ends liberals and conservatives claim to
seek?
This is the point of David Frum's new book, "Comeback: Conservatism That Can
Win Again." Frum, a former speechwriter in this Bush administration,
believes the issues that brought Republicans to power in the 1980s and '90s
are different from the concerns of most Americans today. That hasn't stopped
Republicans and conservatives from resurrecting what worked before: taxes,
guns and promises to restore "traditional values," things that are beyond
the power of politicians. As we've seen in both parties, politicians have
trouble imposing morality on themselves. Why do we suppose them capable of
imposing such "values" (don't they really mean "virtues"?) on the citizenry?
Frum proposes an agenda that uses conservative principles to actually solve,
rather than just talk about, serious problems. He wants universally
available health insurance, but offered through the private sector; lower
taxes to encourage savings and investment, but higher taxes on energy and
pollution to promote conservation; a conservative environmentalism that
promotes nuclear power to reduce our need for oil and coal (this would
satisfy the Left's misguided belief in "global warming," while
simultaneously pleasing the Right by freeing us from dependence on foreign
oil); federal policies to encourage larger families; major reductions in
unskilled immigration; a campaign for prison reform and a campaign against
obesity; higher ethical standards inside the conservative movement and
Republican Party; and a renewed commitment to expand and rebuild the armed
forces in order to crush terrorism and prepare for the coming challenge from
China.
I would add a micro-loan program to help the poor out of poverty, rather
than more government programs that subsidize the poor in their poverty and
offer no hope for the future.
Conservatives also need to do a better job of storytelling. They should
celebrate people who have overcome poverty and hopelessness as examples to
others. It is not enough for conservatives to advocate for lower taxes and
smaller government if the purpose is for Americans to acquire more money and
material goods Americans already have so much they are renting storage units
in which to place the overflow. Imagine the economic - even spiritual -
revival that might occur if conservatives "adopted" one person or family and
made it their goal to help them improve their lives. There are few thrills
greater than seeing a life transformed in which you have played a part.
Reducing the "need" for government would shrink its size and cost. It also
would pay political dividends for conservatism and the Republican Party.
If conservatives really want to win, they will adopt new ideas based on old
principles. Conservatives are in danger of losing the coming election and
future ones because they have not reinvented themselves for a new era.
Liberal ideas mostly don't work. Conservatives must demonstrate to voters
their ideas do. |