I’m not going to burden you with a treatise on Edmund Burke on a Friday afternoon. If people want to call him the “father of conservatism,” I’m willing to let that ride. I do get annoyed, however, when folks insist that the words “conservative” and “conservatism” used to have a nobler meaning and that they’ve been hijacked. We’ve been living with the “Conservative Movement” for too long now for me to buy that garbage. I don’t see any distinction between a conservative and a “Movement Conservative.”
Not anymore, and not for a long, long time.
When I use the word “conservative” I am referring to people who are part of the Conservative Movement, and I’d trace that movement to the reaction to FDR’s New Deal.
I’m aware that this is an argument about semantics and that it could open an endless debate about what defines conservatism or Movement Conservatism. For me, however, I cannot agree with Michael Gerson that there is some big distinction between Ted Cruz and Donald Trump.
The worst does not mean the nomination of Ted Cruz, in spite of justified fears of political disaster. Cruz is an ideologue with a message perfectly tuned for a relatively small minority of the electorate. Uniquely in American politics, the senator from Texas has made his reputation by being roundly hated by his colleagues — apparently a prerequisite for a certain kind of anti-establishment conservative, but unpromising for an image makeover at his convention.
Cruz’s nomination would represent the victory of the hard right — religious right and tea party factions — within the Republican coalition. After he loses, the ideological struggles within the GOP would go on.
Gerson thinks Cruz would lose badly, and it seems that he feels that Cruz would deserve to lose. But he doesn’t think Cruz’s brand of anti-establishment conservatism is out of bounds. He anticipates that this brand will have a persistent future on the right and within the Republican Party, and he doesn’t seem to have any problem with that. He’d struggle against this faction, certainly, but he wouldn’t refuse to be part of an organization that they dominate.
But Trump is another matter:
…Trump’s nomination would not be the temporary victory of one of the GOP’s ideological factions. It would involve the replacement of the humane ideal at the center of the party and its history. If Trump were the nominee, the GOP would cease to be.
You must be wondering where the humane ideal resides in Ted Cruz’s campaign. Gerson tries to explain:
Whatever your view of Republican politicians, the aspiration, the self-conception, of the party was set by Abraham Lincoln: human dignity, honored by human freedom and undergirded by certain moral commitments, including compassion and tolerance. Lincoln described the “promise that in due time the weights should be lifted from the shoulders of all men, and that all should have an equal chance.”
So far, I’m still failing to see how this applies to Ted Cruz, or really any of the likely alternatives to Ted Cruz.
All of [Trump’s] angry resentment against invading Hispanics and Muslims adds up to a kind of ethno-nationalism — an assertion that the United States is being weakened and adulterated by the other. This is consistent with European, right-wing, anti-immigrant populism. It is not consistent with conservatism, which, at the very least, involves respect for institutions and commitment to reasoned, incremental change.
Here is the allusion to Edmund Burke. Conservatism is supposed to revere institutions, although the American version makes an exception for the throne. But what institutions has Movement Conservatism respected?
Not Congress or the federal government. Not the Supreme Court. The Office of the Presidency is respected only when it is in the hands of a conservative. It would be ludicrous to assert that Ted Cruz has shown any respect for any American institution, or even for the norms of any American institution.
Go down the list: The IRS, the Environmental Protection Agency, the Departments of Education, Commerce, and Interior, the ATF…
What characterizes the conservative attitude to our institutions isn’t respect but paranoia.
And the same is true for multilateral organizations like the United Nations, NATO, and even (at times) our armed forces.
The only institutions that conservatives have fairly consistently respected are religious institutions, and, even then, only the institutions of certain religions.
This is why I simply cannot agree with the following:
Liberals who claim that Trumpism is the natural outgrowth, or logical conclusion, of conservatism or Republicanism are simply wrong. Edmund Burke is not the grandfather of Nigel Farage. Lincoln is not even the distant relative of Trump.
The only thing I agree with here is that Trump isn’t the logical conclusion. Cruz is. Rubio is. Christie is. Paul Ryan is. Mitch McConnell is.
None of these folks are “conservative” in any kind of Lincolnesque or Burkean way. Neither were George W. Bush or Dick Cheney. And that’s why I find Gerson’s cri de coeur so hard to fathom.
Ultimately, these political matters are quite personal. I have spent 25 years in the company of compassionate conservatives, reform conservatives, Sam’s Club conservatives or whatever they want to call themselves, trying to advance an agenda of social justice in America’s center-right party. We have shared a belief that sound public policy — promoting opportunity, along with the skills and values necessary to grasp it — can improve the lives of our fellow citizens and thus make politics an honorable adventure.
The nomination of Trump would reduce Republican politics — at the presidential level — to an enterprise of squalid prejudice. And many Republicans could not follow, precisely because they are Republicans. By seizing the GOP, Trump would break it to pieces.
If that’s how Gerson insists on seeing the situation, his party has already been broken to pieces. Trump really has nothing to do with it.
The idea that, were Abraham Lincoln to be transported into 21st Century America, he’d find himself at home in the Repub party is beyond delusional. Lincoln the Big Gub’mint Hater. Lincoln the Job Creator. Lincoln the Warmongering Neocon (perhaps Gerson needs to read Representative Lincoln’s views on the great war of choice of his day—and no, Gerson, it’s not the Civil War, ha-ha.)
But of course Gerson imagines that if he and his “essence”, his personality, were somehow transported back to, say, 1860 or 1775 he’d be anti-slavery or anti-crown is also comically delusional. These authority-worshiping reactionary “conservatives” don’t even understand their own personality traits, let alone Lincoln’s, for god’s sake.
Let poor Father Abraham rest in peace, you appalling “conservative” monsters. Leave him out of the fascist mess you have made. It’s really the least you can do to preserve his memory…
And finally the notion that Lincoln’s anti-slavery rhetoric should be yoked into the service of (economic) “liberation” for CEOS and plutocrats and enforcement of American Taliban morality for all is beyond risible.
That Lincoln’s party may indeed have had ideals of human rights and human dignity does not compel the conclusion those values still motivate (in 2016) the party he helped found in 1858. An error of logic. Not to mention evidence.
But it’s not about that. If it’s “the party of Lincoln” (and we all love Lincoln!) then that’s what it is. If Christ is “the prince of peace” then his followers stand for “peace.” Nobody is racist or sexist because those are bad traits and we’re talking about good people — just ask them.
And if you disagree, you’re just being “politically incorrect,” which means burdening people with “labels” they don’t like. It’s beyond mere tribal identity; it’s an inversion of the entire idea of language and meaning.
Obviously I meant “politically correct”
The Doughy Pantload’s kind
Gerson should look into the early Republicans’ relationship with the Know Nothings. As I recall, there was sort of an uneasy alliance there. I remember reading about how Lincoln had to figure out how to distance himself from the nativists in the Republican coalition without losing their support entirely.
Replace the name of Trump in this peace with the name Gingrich, and go back 20 years.
Um, maybe it’s time to acknowledge that Gerson’s an idiot, and like Frum, should just be ignored.
This longing for a non-hateful brand of conservatism went out the window when the GOP decided anything FDR did was evil. Since then, it’s been a mop-up operation for the conservative forces over the remnants of the party of Lincoln.
I can’t help but wonder if people like Gerson are so cynical that they’ll write this type of sewage-tripe, while knowing full well that it’s full of lying sh*t propaganda. Or that they’ve drunk the Kool Aid so deeply for so long that they actually, you know, believe this craptastic nonsensical baloney.
I’m not sure that I want to know, either way. If Gerson has become as unhinged from factual reality, as the rest of the base has become (from decades of unhinged, sexist, racist, homophobic, nasty-minded, anti-everything but WHITE MEN bullshit hype propaganda), then more fool Gerson.
Yet another rightwingnut welfare recipient kissing up while kicking down to get his welfare payola from his 1% Overlords. ptoui!
The age old question about all coaches of Team Conservative: A Fool or a Knave?
Take your pick, I guess…although the Knave is likely the more reprehensible.
I’ve had to divide them into three for the last few years. There is still stupid and evil, but now we also have insane. Is this man writing straight out lies or is he simply delusional?
It’s just one of the many brands of stupid. Insane isn’t really a thing except to those whose livelihoods depend on it in the business of measuring souls.
But none of them that can form a coherent sentence with purpose can be called stupid.
They’re liars all from start to finish. They have motive, means, and opportunity. So they lie. Some smarter than others look less “insane.” Others less “sane” look more stupid. But liars are liars, and by any moral system humanity has ever described, evil.
It gets tricky sometimes, but lying is an easy thing to fall into. We all do it for the same (often smart) reasons. Personal gain. It pays to lie. So not stupid. Not crazy. Just lying.
Yes, but I have had the experience in my little life where I’ve been around others – usually in work situations but sometimes other types of social situations – who are such sociopathic liars that they appear to start believing their own bs.
Hard to describe accurately, but I honestly get the impression that some people so immerse themselves in their lies, obfuscations, subterfuges, etc, that they start to believe their own hype.
I guess that’s what I’m driving at. After all, the rightwing noise machine has been in full swing for over 3 decades now and has become ever more unhinged from substantive and easily provable reality.
I’m probably splitting hairs, but I do wonder if some of these “pundits” actually have reached the point where they literally believe what they’re barfing out. But it’s not worth contemplating much more than that.
They are lying, and at the end of the day, there’s a real depravity to it. Watching them twist and turn and freak out over Trump has its minor amusement value, but in the end, even that’s not very funny.
It’s torturous.
I don’t know, Booman. What about Your Daddy’s GOP.
You seem conflicted about exactly what the GOP means and has meant in the past 100 years.
I’m not conflicted.
I am talking about conservatives and conservatism. Eisenhower wasn’t a conservative, or a movement conservative anyway.
Neither was Poppy when he ran for president in 1980.
Nixon was a hybrid of the two camps.
Even Reagan wasn’t truly conservative. I mean, he was close enough but he couldn’t govern that way.
Gerson wants to talk about conservatism.
If he wanted to condemn it and reclaim the best in the GOP’s heritage, I would be less perplexed.
I think what Gerson is saying is that he’s the squishiest squish that ever squished. He makes jellyfish look tough and unyielding. He’s also saying he enjoys total isolation from the actual party, like he’s proud of it.
“his party has already been broken to pieces.Trump really has nothing to do with it.”
How about Donald Trump is simply the guy who came along and picked up the pieces?
I just wonder where he put his glasses?
Conservatism has for many years been professing how they love Jesus Christ and the Family. While at the same time their policy actions, political speech and ways of life support all of the qualities of the Devil.
When can we say quite clearly that the anti-FDR Modern Conservative Movement after 82 years has failed at its own program. And that one big cause of its failure is embracing liberal globalism during and after World War II and trying to absorb that within a national military framework (smell the Dulleses here?) and shake the stigma of “isolationism” (really a polite cover for Axis sympathies).
But in 2016 it is apparent to obvious that both in foreign policy and in domestic policy, the conservatism heralded with the ascendency of Reagan conservatives has not delivered one whit of what they promised. And that what they have delivered has turned to shit.
Michael Gerson’s party might not be dead, but it blew badly its historical chance.
Conservatives were already globalists before WWII to some degree. The Yankees, any way. They did not give up cartel monopolies as their favorite way of doing business. Are you talking about trade policies?
I’m talking about the Fords, Bushes, Dulleses, and other Republicans who were up to their ears with the Axis and did not want to go to war because they would lose their ability to repatriate their profits; so they hid behind the notion that Republicans were isolationists.
Democrats tolerated this because “trading with the enemy” trials would have fractured national unity in a time of war. There are some conservatives, some of whom hang out at the American Conservative, who have adopted an isolationist line since Obama’s election. But the Republican foreign policy since 1946 has been aggressively pro-military and pro-imperialist. And it has failed so much that David Stockman can make the argument that the US has not won a war since World War II in the sense that politics returned to normal, the military was demobilized, and life at home returned to “normalcy”.
Or maybe just working not to repeat their 1914-1916 errors.
For the US corporate “actors” in the 1930s, it was at its core the first stage of the Cold War. A brief time-out had to be called because Hitler, Mussolini, and Japan got a bit too big for their breeches. But the old order was quickly restored after that, and as David Talbot detailed, it included a large number of Nazi officials.
The US imported a whole bunch of Nazis after WWII. Once you realize this, you realize why the US has been the way it has been since.
The US basically kicked Germany, Italy, and Japan in the crotch, threw them down the hill, and planted the US flag at the very top for everyone to see.
Imagine how Germany would have reacted to winning WWII in regards to world politics and economics, and just take a look at US global policy since 1945.
1980 to now. Maybe 1968. Whatever chance history may have afforded it, could it please just die now?
From your fingertips and keyboard to God’s consciousness.
Gerson seems to be conflating the GOP with conservatives going all the way back to Lincoln which is strange way to make the argument
True but they love to invoke Lincoln, especially when someone realizes that their proverbial slip is showing. AKA, We’re not racists! After all, we’re the party of Lincoln!!!111!!! and so on…
Besides Lincoln, Teddy Roosevelt, and Eisenhower who do they have? They don’t want to cite TR because he was the trust buster and started environmentalism and consumer protection. Eisenhower was wildly popular, both with the party and the citizens. You only had to see the standing ovation at the 1960 Republican Convention to know that Ike didn’t slink out of town like W. But they don’t want to cite him, either because he sent troops into Little Rock to enforce a court desegregation order (no Cliven Bundy’s for him! You don’t mess with the guy that stomped the Wehrmacht!) He built the Interstate Highway system (proposed by Senator Gore Sr.), spent billions on NASA (when a billion meant something) and warned about the unholy alliance between the military and it’s corporate supplier. Whew! Let’s forget about that guy! Oh, yeah he also raised the top income tax bracket far higher than FDR had.
To tell the truth, if the GOP had candidates like Ike, Hillary would be home baking cookies and Bernie might be a Republican. Damn! I wish the Democrats had left wing candidates like Eisenhower (Bernie and Dean excepted).
If the public knew the real record of the Eisenhower administration, Democrats would stop citing him as some sort of decent POTUS.
Beats the Hell out of those who came after him. Kennedy and LBJ’s legacy of Vietnam is nothing to cite either.
However, the point was that each of the cited actions is anathema to today’s Republican Party. All of there (relatively) good Presidents were to the Left of the DLC.
I could extend that to Governors as well. I know you’re from California, not Illinois, but I can also state that Jim Edgar and Jim Thompson, despite their faults, were worlds better than Rauner or Wisconsin’s Walker. I preferred Adlai Stevenson when he was Governor and since we now are into dynasty’s I’d like to see Sheila Simon run.
The point is that the opposition has to viable, else democracy is a sham. If there really is no alternative then there is no democracy. I know in the pit of my stomach that in Fall we will have the choice of Trump or Shillary. I will either leave it blank (not a good idea in Illinois) or (more likely) mark whatever third party is on the ballot. I won’t stay home because I want to vote for Tammy Duckworth to replace Mark Kirk and a variety of Democrats down ballot.
Ike and the Dulles brothers set up many foreign policy traps for successor administrations. JFK was somewhat along the way to getting a handle on them when he was assassinated (after several flubs), but LBJ was too provincial to see them before or after he walked right in.
In many respects the foreign policy disasters since WW2 are all attributable largely to Alan and John F Dulles.
Overthrowing a democratically elected government and installing the Shah in 1954 (for BP), set up the 1979 debacle. Kermit Roosevelt operated out of the US embassy, something the Iranian take over in 1979 was preventing. This of course lead to Reagan Bush Sr and Casey puffing up Saddam and the ongoing fiasco that is the middle east.
Propping up the dictator in Diem in Vietnam lead directly to the Vietnam war and all that intails.
Doing the same for Batista in Cuba and fighting freedom fighters trying to topple him lead to a 50 year failure of effective foreign policy in Cuba.
Overthrowing a democracy in Guatemala (1954) for American Business interests. A practice one of their minions (Kissinger) felt was appropriate in Chile circa 1973
Pushing both India and Egypt into the Soviet sphere because neither would play ball the way Dulles wanted, instead of allowing both to be non aligned.
Shepherding Richard Nixon’s political career in it’s early stages, probably their greatest sin (for us).
…. are the dismal legacy they have left us.
PS ever wonder why when they had to name the first airport outside Washington in 1959,
it was named for these bureaucrats instead of IKE?
Tells how much power and influence they held at the time.
Didn’t want to obscure the main thrust, but Ike DID send troops to enforce the school desegregation order while Obama let Cliven Bundy win. I would have loved a battalion of troops arresting or shooting those insurrectionists. But the Republicans would shout and swoon. can’t have that can we? Have to give in to those assholes every time for “bipartisanship” don’t we?
Ike sent federal troops into a state dominated by Democrats and to enforce a SCOTUS decision. A current corollary would be sending federal troops to Alabama to enforce “Obergefell” in 2018.
Nevada is a purplish state and the Bundy matter isn’t state officials defying a Supreme Court order, but a private citizen thumbing his nose at a federal agency. Ike would have backed off of this one as well.
They had no problem sending a nun to jail for three years for tresspass on federal installation.
Bundy is defying a federal court order and shooting at federal personnel. I doubt Ike would have overlooked it. Certainly Hoover would not.
Ike overlooked freaking Joe Mccarthy. He and John Foster Dulles allowed McCarthy to decimate the State Department (quite possibly getting rid of the actual best and brightest). Ike also either overlooked or privately approved all of the illegal stuff the Dulles bros were doing. So, don’t give me this crap that Ike didn’t mostly take the path of least resistance.
I suppose Hoover’s handling of the bonus army could suggest how he would have dealt with the Bundys. OTOH, the bonus army protest was in DC, it was huge (43,000), and they were camped out for well over a month before MacArthur led the army charge to clear them out. Plus, there wasn’t anything honorable in stiffing the bonus army.
Bundy and his followers have not shot at Federal personnel.
I don’t want our President to model themselves on what Hoover would have done.
Well, this is what they do. Gerson. Doublespeak is their natural language. It’s not the message, it’s the messenger that matters. Conservatism is a fundamentally empty philosophy. Democracy begs the question. Are we bankrupt? Are we joyless? Are we stupid? Are we damned? Or not. Democracy insists that we’re not and so conservatism, movement or otherwise, has no legitimate role to play in it.
Conservatism, progressivism, etc. Just branding. Blah, blah, blah and then somebody wins. Somebody who is in thrall to the PermaGov every time. We get to the same place no matter who sits in the White House. It’s been that way at least since Bush I and an argument can be made that it has been that way since the Kennedy/MLK Jr. murders.
So nu???
AG
Progressivism is more in line with democracy, I think. It’s more than a brand. We Progressives actually acknowledge the validity of a value system (life, property, truth, the future, happiness). And prescribe a practice that approaches it (democracy / socialism). Conservatives, not so much.
Yes, but…it’s not working.
What now?
AG
Duck and cover?
“…improve the lives of our fellow citizens…”
Yeah, Gerson. I read this too and choked on this line, since when have conservatives given a rat’s ass about “the lives of our fellow citizens”? Or maybe they only consider “fellow citizens” to be older white men? What a freaking joke.
Once you remember that conservatives say things like “real Americans” (implying that there are fake Americans) and “real America” (implying that only flyover country is real America, with cities and the coasts being fake America), you realize that when a conservative says “fellow citizens”, they are only talking about fellow conservatives.
Period.
Conservatism, especially US Conservatism, is very tribal, “us vs. them”, in nature.
Gerson doesn’t give one fuck about libruuls or his neighbors who vote for the democrat.
Gerson is lamenting the fact that he and his conservative buddies can’t all agree that libruuls are evil and coalesce around one Republican candidate who can unite the party without letting its base’s hatred and vitriol rise to the surface for all to see.
Trump and Cruz don’t really differ on what they want the US to be, but at least Cruz is still holding the dog whistle, which allows conservatives the ability to at least pretend that they are a majority. Candidates like Jeb make the establishment happy because he can play the dog whistle like a master.
Trump just shouts out hatred and fascist bullshit, and Gerson’s just embarrassed and ashamed to have spent his entire life lying about what conservatism actually is.
It’s funny when Republicans write articles basically lamenting the fact that the Republican party is full of…Republicans (h/t to Driftglass, as always).