(http://www.nytimes.com/)  


 
____________________________________
October 21, 2010

The State of  Conservatism
By CHRISTOPHER CALDWELL
 
Within the space of a week last summer, one judge in Arizona, ruling in a  
suit brought by the Obama administration, blocked a provision in a _new 
state law_ 
(http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/subjects/i/immigration-and-emigration/arizona-immigration-law-sb-1070/index.html?inline=nyt-c
lassifier)  permitting police officers to check the  status of suspected 
illegal immigrants, while another blocked the implementation  of a California 
referendum banning gay marriage. The two decisions imposed  liberal policies 
that public opinion opposed. These things happen, of course.  Congress had 
acted contrary to measurable public opinion when it passed _health care 
reform_ 
(http://topics.nytimes.com/top/news/health/diseasesconditionsandhealthtopics/health_insurance_and_managed_care/health_care_reform/index.html?inline=n
yt-classifier)  in March. What made the two judicial  rulings different was 
that both seemed to challenge the principle that it is the  people who have 
the last word on how they are governed.  
American conservatives, most notably the activists who support various _Tea 
Party_ 
(http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/subjects/t/tea_party_movement/index.html?inline=nyt-classifier)
  groups, have a great 
variety of anxieties and  grievances just now. But what unites them all, at 
least 
rhetorically, is the  sense that something has gone wrong constitutionally, 
shutting them out of  decisions that rightfully belong to them as citizens. 
This is why many talk  about “taking our country back.”  
If polls are to be believed, conservatives should have no difficulty taking 
 the country back or doing whatever else they want with it. Gallup now 
counts 54  percent of likely voters as self-described conservatives and only 18 
per cent as  liberals. More than half of Americans (55 per cent) say they 
have grown more  conservative in the past year, according to the pollsters 
Scott Rasmussen and  Doug Schoen in their new book, MAD AS HELL: How the Tea 
Party Movement  Is Fundamentally Remaking Our Two-Party System 
(Harper/HarperCollins,  $27.99).  
America’s self-described conservatives, however, have a problem: They lack 
a  party. While the Tea Party may look like a stalking horse for 
Republicans, the  two have been a bad fit. Insurgents have cut a swath through 
Republicans’  well-laid election plans. They helped oust Florida’s party 
chairman. 
They  toppled the favored candidates of the party establishment in Alaska, 
Colorado,  Delaware, Florida, Kentucky, New York, South Carolina, Utah and 
elsewhere.  
More than 70 percent of Republicans embrace the Tea Party, but the feeling 
is  not reciprocated. If conservatives could vote for the Tea Party as a 
party, they  would prefer it to the Republicans, according to Rasmussen. 
(Lately, Rasmussen’s  polling, more than others’, has favored Republicans. Not 
coincidentally,  perhaps, it has picked up certain recent shifts earlier and 
more reliably — like  the surge that won the Republican _Scott Brown_ 
(http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/b/scott_p_brown/index.ht
ml?inline=nyt-per)  the late _Ted Kennedy_ 
(http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/k/edward_m_kennedy/index.html?inline=nyt-per)
 ’s 
Massachusetts Senate seat in January.)  Much of the Tea Party is made up of 
conservative-leaning independents. The  journalist Jonathan Rauch has 
called these people “debranded Republicans,” and  they are debranded for a 
reason — 55 percent of them oppose the Republican  leadership. While 
Republicans 
are likely to reap all the benefit of Tea Party  enthusiasm in November’s 
elections, this is a marriage of convenience. The  influential conservative 
blogger Erick Erickson of _RedState.com_ (http://redstate.com/) , insists that 
one of his top goals is  denying the Republican establishment credit for 
any electoral successes.  
Hence the Republicans’ problem. After November, the party will need to 
reform  in a conservative direction, in line with its base’s wishes, and 
without 
a clear  idea of whether the broader public will be well disposed to such 
reform.  
How Republicans wound up in this situation requires one to state the 
obvious.  Well before _George W. Bush_ 
(http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/b/george_w_bush/index.html?inline=nyt-per)
  presided over 
the collapse of the global  financial system, a reasonable-sounding case was 
being mustered that he was the  worst president in history. Foreign policy 
was the grounds on which voters  repudiated him and his party, starting in 
2006, and _President Obama_ 
(http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/o/barack_obama/index.html?inline=nyt-per)
 ’s drawdown of forces in 
Iraq may be the  most popular thing he has done. But foreign policy is 
unlikely to drive voters’  long-term assessment of the parties. The Iraq 
misadventure was justified with  the same spreading-democracy rhetoric that 
_Bill 
Clinton_ 
(http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/c/bill_clinton/index.html?inline=nyt-per)
 , _Madeleine Albright_ 
(http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/a/madeleine_k_albright/index.html?in
line=nyt-per)  and other Democrats used to justify  interventions in Haiti 
and the Balkans in the 1990s. President Obama’s  difficulties in resolving 
Afghanistan and closing Guantánamo show that Bush’s  options were narrower 
than they appeared at the time.  
Republicans’ future electoral fortunes will depend on domestic policy and  
specifically on whether they can reconnect with “small-c” conservatism — 
the  conservatism whose mottoes are “Neither a borrower nor a lender be” and “
Mind  your own business,” and the opposite of which is not liberalism but 
utopianism.  The Bush administration was a time of “big-C” Conservatism, 
ideological  conservatism, which the party pursued with mixed results. As far 
as social  issues were concerned, this ideology riveted a vast bloc of 
religious  conservatives to the party, and continues to be an electoral asset 
(although  that bloc, by some measures, is shrinking). Had gay marriage not 
been 
on several  state ballots in 2004, _John Kerry_ (http://topics.nyt
imes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/k/john_kerry/index.html?inline=nyt-per)
  
might now be sitting in the White House.  
Ideological conservatism also meant “_supply-side economics_ 
(http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/subjects/e/economics/supply-side_econo
mics/index.html?inline=nyt-classifier) ” — a misnomer for the doctrine  
that all tax cuts eventually pay for themselves through economic growth. The  
problem is, they don’t. So supply-side wound up being a form of permanent  
Keynesian stimulus — a bad idea during the overheated years before 2008. Huge 
 tax cuts, from which the highest earners drew the biggest benefits, helped 
knock  the budget out of balance and misallocated trillions of dollars. To 
a  dispiriting degree, tax cuts remain the Republican answer to every 
economic  question. _Eric Cantor_ 
(http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/c/eric_cantor/index.html?inline=nyt-per)
 , potentially the House 
majority leader,  told The Wall Street Journal that if Democrats went home 
without renewing  various _Bush-era tax cuts_ 
(http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/subjects/t/taxation/bush_tax_cuts/index.html?inline=ny
t-classifier)  (which they did), “I promise you,  H.R. 1 will be to 
retroactively restore the lower rates.”  
Until recently, supply side was political gravy for Republicans. It 
confirmed  the rule that in American politics the party most plausibly offering 
something  for nothing wins. In the 1980s, the New York congressman _Jack Kemp_ 
(http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/k/jack_f_kemp/in
dex.html?inline=nyt-per)  was the archetype of an ambitious,  magnanimous, “
sunny” kind of Republican who let you keep more of your taxes  while 
building more housing for the poor. Democrats who questioned the  affordability 
of 
these policies sounded like killjoys. In a time of scarcity  like our own, 
calculations change. Today your tax cut means shuttering someone  else’s 
AIDS clinic. Your welfare check comes off of someone else’s dinner table.  
Deficits in the Obama era are a multiple of the Bush ones, and the product 
of  a more consciously pursued Keynesianism. But that does not absolve 
Republicans  of the need to find a path to balancing the budget. With some 
exceptions — like  Representative _Paul Ryan_ 
(http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/r/paul_d_ryan/index.html?inline=nyt-per)
  of 
Wisconsin, a Kemp protégé who has laid out  a “Road Map” for reforming (i.e., 
cutting) _Social Security_ 
(http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/subjects/s/social_security_us/index.html?inline=nyt-classifier)
  in coming 
generations — Republicans  have not adjusted to zero-sum economics. There is 
certainly no credible path to  budget balance in the _“Pledge to America”_ 
(http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/organizations/r/republic
an_party/a_pledge_to_america/index.html?inline=nyt-classifier)  released in 
late September.  
Yet the case against supply-side economics can never be airtight or 
decisive,  and Republican tax promises will probably help the party this year. 
That 
is  because taxes are not just an economic benchmark, but a political one. 
The  public should not expect more in services than it pays in taxes. But 
the  government should not expect more in taxes than it offers in 
representation. And  the number of Americans who feel poorly represented has 
risen 
alarmingly during  the Obama administration.  
Americans’ feelings toward the president are complex. On the one hand, 
there  is little of the ad hominem contempt that was in evidence during the 
Clinton and  Bush administrations. There are no campaign spots showing a 
Congressional  candidate’s face morphing into Obama’s. But the president’s 
ideology, fairly or  not, has provoked something approaching panic. Not many 
Americans agree that  Obama is a closet totalitarian, as the Fox News host 
_Glenn 
Beck_ 
(http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/b/glenn_beck/index.html?inline=nyt-per)
  has claimed. But they have serious  
misgivings of a milder kind.  
In retrospect it looks inevitable that Republicans would have been punished 
 by voters in 2008; but until Lehman Brothers collapsed in mid-September of 
that  year, it was far from certain they would be, despite strong 
Democratic gains in  the 2006 elections. Independent and Republican voters 
wanted an 
assurance that  Senator Obama would not simply hand over power to the 
_Democratic Party_ 
(http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/organizations/d/democratic_party/index.html?inline=nyt-org)
 . He consistently provided 
it. The  centerpiece of his campaign was a promise of post-partisanship. He 
introduced  himself as a Senate candidate in 2004 at the Boston convention, 
deriding as  false the tendency of pundits to “slice and dice our country 
into red states and  blue states” — a bracingly subversive thing to do at a 
partisan convention. He  praised _Ronald Reagan_ 
(http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/r/ronald_wilson_reagan/index.html?inline=nyt
-per) .  
And in 2008 he got more than 52 percent of the vote, a higher percentage 
than  many political consultants thought possible for a Democrat. That means 
he came  into office unusually dependent on the good will of independents and 
 Republicans. And yet, once in power, the president set to work enacting 
the  agenda of the same Congressional Democrats he had implied he would keep 
at arm’s  length. No president in living memory has compiled a slenderer 
record of  bipartisanship.  
It is often said in the president’s defense that Republican obstructionism  
left him no choice. Today, this is true — and it has put an end, for now, 
to the  productive part of his presidency. But it was not true at the time of 
the  stimulus in early 2009, when the president’s poll numbers were so  
stratospherically high that it appeared risky to oppose him on anything.  
Republicans certainly cannot be blamed for the way Democrats passed their 
health  
care bill. Whether or not the deal-making and parliamentary maneuvering 
required  to secure passage was unprecedented, it was unprecedented in the era 
of C-Span  and blogs, and many voters found it corrupt. The president’s 
legislative program  has been bought at a huge price in public discontent. The 
expression “picking up  nickels in front of a steamroller” has been used to 
describe a lot of the  gambles taken by A.I.G. and other companies on the 
eve of the financial crisis.  It describes the president’s agenda equally 
well.  
It is vital to understand where this steamroller is coming from. According 
to  Gallup, support for Obama has fallen only slightly among Democrats, from 
90  percent to 81 percent, and only slightly among Republicans, from 20 
percent to  12 percent. It is independents who have abandoned him: 56 percent 
approved of  him when he came into office, versus 38 percent now. The reason 
the country is  getting more conservative is not that conservatives are 
getting louder. It is  that people in the dead center of the electorate are 
turning into conservatives  at an astonishing rate.  
The frustration and disappointment of these voters is probably directed as  
much at themselves as at their president. There were two ways to judge 
Obama the  candidate — by what he said or by the company he kept. The cable-TV 
loudmouths  who dismissed Obama right off the bat were unfair in certain 
particulars. But,  on the question of whether Obama, if elected, would be more 
liberal or more  conservative than his campaign rhetoric indicated, they 
arrived at a more  accurate assessment than those of us who pored over his 
speeches, parsed his  interviews and read his first book.  
Some wish the president had governed more to the left, insisting on a 
public  option in the health care bill and pushing for a larger stimulus. But 
those  people make up only a small fraction even of the 18 percent of voters 
who call  themselves liberal. In a time of growing populism and distrust, 
Republicans  enjoy the advantage of running against the party of the elite. 
This 
seems to be  a controversial proposition, but it should not be. It is not 
the same as saying  that Democrats are the party of elitism. One can define 
elitism as,  say, resistance to progressive taxation, and make a case that 
Republicans better  merit that description. But, broadly speaking, the 
Democratic Party is the party  to which elites belong. It is the party of 
Harvard 
(and most of the Ivy  League), of Microsoft and Apple (and most of Silicon 
Valley), of Hollywood and  Manhattan (and most of the media) and, although 
there is some evidence that  numbers are evening out in this election cycle, of 
Goldman Sachs (and most of  the investment banking profession). That the 
billionaire _David Koch_ 
(http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/k/david_h_koch/index.html?inline=nyt-per)
 ’s Americans for Prosperity 
Foundation  supports the Tea Party has recently been much in the news. But 
the Democrats  have the support of more, and more active, billionaires. Of 
the 20 richest ZIP  codes in America, according to the Center for Responsive 
Politics, 19 gave the  bulk of their money to Democrats in the last 
election, in most cases the vast  bulk — 86 percent in 10024 on the Upper West 
Side. 
Meanwhile, only 22 percent of  non-high-school educated white males are 
happy with the direction the country is  going in. The Democrats’ overlap with 
elites leaves each party with a  distinctive liability. The Democrats appear 
sincerely deluded about whom they  actually represent. Democrats — who 
would have no trouble discerning elite  solidarity in the datum that, say, in 
the 1930s the upper ranks of Britain’s  media, church, business and political 
institutions were dominated by Tories —  somehow think their own 
predominance in similar precincts is . . . what?  Coincidence? Irony?  
Republicans, meanwhile, do not recognize the liability that their 
repudiation  by elites represents in an age of expertise and specialization — 
even in 
the  eyes of the non-elite center of the country. Like a European workingman
’s party  at the turn of the last century, the _Republican Party_ 
(http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/organizations/r/republican_party/
index.html?inline=nyt-org)  today inspires doubts that it has the  
expertise required to run a large government bureaucracy. Whatever one thinks 
of  
Obama’s economic team, and Bill Clinton’s before it, the Bush White House was 
 never capable, in eight years, of assembling a similarly accomplished one. 
Nor  is there much evidence that Republicans were ever able to 
conceptualize the  serious problems with the nation’s medical system, let alone 
undertake to reform  it on their own terms. “Democrats and Republicans agree 
that 
our health care  system is broken in fundamental ways,” Eric Cantor notes in 
YOUNG GUNS:  A New Generation of Conservative Leaders (Threshold, $15), a 
campaign  book he has written with Paul Ryan and Representative Kevin McCarthy 
of  California. Well, great. But for years now, Republicans discussing the  
availability and cost of health care have been like a kid who, when asked 
why he  hasn’t cleaned up his room, replies, “I was just about to!”  
It is in the context of class that _Sarah Palin_ 
(http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/p/sarah_palin/index.html?inline=nyt-per)
 ’
s two-year career on the American political  scene is so significant. She “
almost seemed to set off a certain trip wire  within the political class 
regarding access to power,” as Rasmussen and Schoen  put it. But it is not an 
ideological trip wire. The Alaska governorship that  catapulted Palin onto the 
national scene requires dealing with oil executives  and divvying up the 
money from their lease payments. It is a job for a  pragmatist, not a 
preacher. Palin has sometimes opposed big government and  sometimes favored it, 
as 
became clear when journalists discovered that, contrary  to Palin’s claims, 
she had been slow to oppose the wasteful Alaskan “Bridge to  Nowhere,” which 
became a symbol of federal pork.  
The controversies over Palin are about class (and markers of class, like  
religiosity), not ideology. She endorsed several underdog insurgent 
candidates  who wound up winning Republican primaries in the spring and summer. 
How 
did she  do that, when few observers — no matter how well informed, no matter 
how close  to the Republican base — had given them a chance? Either Palin 
is a political  idiot savant of such gifts that those who have questioned her 
intelligence  should revise their opinion or, more likely, she is hearing 
signals from the  median American that are inaudible to the governing classes 
— like those  frequencies that teenagers can hear but adults can’t.  
This talent alone does not make Palin a viable national leader. But until  
Republican politicians learn to understand the party’s new base, Palin will 
be  their indispensable dragoman. After November’s election, the party will 
either  reform or it will disappoint its most ardent backers. If it reforms, 
it is  unlikely to be in a direction Palin disapproves of.  
In The Ruling Class: How They Corrupted America and What We Can Do  About 
It (American Spectator/Beaufort, paper, $12.95), Angelo M.  Codevilla, an 
emeritus professor of international relations at Boston University  who 
formerly was on the staff of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence,  
gives a 
very interesting, conservative account of class politics. Codevilla sees  
the country as divided into “the Ruling Class” and “the Country Class,” who  
“have less in common culturally, dislike each other more and embody ways of 
life  more different from one another than did the 19th century’s 
Northerners and  Southerners.” Codevilla’s terms are often frustratingly vague. 
The 
Ruling Class,  in his definition, includes top Democrats as well as Bush 
Republicans, despite  their many differences; the Country Class seems sometimes 
to mean the passive  remainder of the country, and sometimes the vanguard 
of ideological insurgents.  
And yet Codevilla captures the texture of today’s conservative grievances  
with admirable boldness and convincing exactitude. Slights are harder to  
tolerate than exactions, he finds: “Day after day, the Ruling Class’s  
imputations — racist, stupid, prone to violence, incapable of running things —  
hit like artillery cover for the advance of legislation and regulation to  
restrict and delegitimize.” This is a polemic, and people wholly out of 
sympathy  with conservatism will dislike it. But Codevilla makes what we might 
call the  Tea Party case more soberly, bluntly and constructively than anyone 
else has  done.  
Codevilla takes seriously the constitutional preoccupations of today’s  
conservative protesters and their professed desire for enhanced self-rule. He  
sees that the temptation merely to form “an alternative Ruling Class” in 
the  mirror image of the last one would be self-defeating. Americans must 
instead  reacquire the sinews of self-government, he thinks. 
Self-­government is  difficult and time-­consuming. If it weren’t, 
everyone would have 
it. The  “light” social democratic rule that has prevailed for the past 80 
years has  taken a lot of the burdens of self-government off the shoulders 
of citizens.  They were probably glad to be rid of them. Now, apparently, 
they are changing  their minds.  
Codevilla has no illusions about their prospects for success. Americans are 
 not in the position to roll back their politics to before the time when 
_Franklin D. Roosevelt_ 
(http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/r/franklin_delano_roosevelt/index.html?inline=nyt-per)
  or _Woodrow 
Wilson_ (http://www.nytimes.com/info/woodrow-wilson/?inline=nyt-per)  or 
whoever-you-like ran roughshod over  the Yankee yeomanry. Town, county and 
state 
governments no longer have much  independent political identity. They are 
mere “conduits for federal mandates,”  as Codevilla puts it. He notes that 
the 132 million Americans who inhabited the  country in 1940 could vote on 
117,000 school boards, while today a nation of 310  million votes in only 
15,000 school districts. Self-rule depends on  constitutional prerogatives that 
have long been revoked, institutions that have  long been abandoned and 
habits of mind that were unlearned long ago. (Not to  mention giving up Social 
Security and _Medicare_ 
(http://topics.nytimes.com/top/news/health/diseasesconditionsandhealthtopics/medicare/index.html?inline=nyt-classifier)
  benefits 
that have already been paid for.)  “Does the Country Class really want to 
govern itself,” Codevilla asks, “or is it  just whining for milder 
taskmasters?”  
We will find out soon enough. With a victory in November, Republicans could 
 claim a mandate to repeal the Obama health care law and roll back a good 
deal of  recent stimulus-related spending, neither of which they’ve made any 
pretense of  tolerating. But achieving the larger goal — a citizenry 
sufficiently able to  govern itself to be left alone by Washington — will 
require 
more. The Republican  Party’s leaders will need to sit down respectfully with 
the people who brought  them to power and figure out what they agree on. If 
Republicans make the error  that Democrats did under President Obama, 
mistaking a protest vote for a wide  mandate, the public will turn on them just 
as quickly.  
 
Christopher Caldwell, a senior editor at The Weekly Standard, is the author 
 of “Reflections on the Revolution in Europe: Immigration, Islam, and the  
West.” 

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