Jack Hunter asserts:
Republican presidential frontrunner Mike Huckabee warns âlibertarianism is not Republicanism.â Senator Lindsey Graham has declared, âWe are not going to build this party around libertarian ideas.â Former Senator Rick Santorum says, âI fight very strongly against libertarian influence within the Republican Party and the conservative movement.â
Conservatives who see rising libertarian influence in the GOP as a problem are not only wrong.
They forget recent history.
Bush-Cheney was one of the least conservative eras in the last half century. Government and the debt exploded at a rate surpassed only by Obama. Medicare Part D was the largest entitlement expansion since LBJ. Bushâs tenure began with doubling the size of the Department of Education and ended with bailing out Wall Street. The Weekly Standardâs Fred Barnes praised Bush as representing a new âBig Government Conservatismâ while Dick Cheney insisted âdeficits donât matter.â
There wasnât even the pretense during Bush-Cheney that government should be smaller. In 2003, The Manchester Union-Leader reported of National Committee Chairman Ed Gillespie, âthe partyâs new chairman, energetic and full of vigor, said in no uncertain terms that the days of Reaganesque Republican railings against the expansion of federal government are over.â
One could argue that Reagan talked a good small government game, but like Bush, he ultimately expanded the state. Conservatives could also argue, in Reaganâs defense, that Congress never delivered on promised spending cuts.
Regardless, despite any failings, Reagan always fought for and promoted limited government. Bush never did. He never even tried. As columnist James Antle compared them, âBushâs record on spending was much worse than Reaganâs, and so was his rhetoric. Reaganâs speeches kept conservatives focused on the evils of government growth even when his actions did not.â
Fred Barnes got it right in 2003: âReagan was a small government conservative who declared in his inauguration address that government was the problem, not the solution. There, Bush begs to differ.â
In addition to rejecting small government philosophy, the issues that unified conservatives most during Bush-Cheney were definitively anti-libertarian: support for the Iraq War, the Patriot Act, warrantless wiretapping and âenhanced interrogation tactics.â
Some of Bushâs foreign policy decisions and national security measures must be viewed through a post 9-11 lens, but still do not justify his ultimate legacy from a conservative perspective: A Republican president explicitly rejected the core tenets of small government and constitutional liberty that had defined American conservatism for essentially its entire history.
Barry Goldwater famously said that âextremism in the defense of libertyâ was no vice. Reagan believed conservatism proper was like a three-legged stool consisting of national security, religious and economic-libertarian conservatives.
Bush certainly represented national security conservatives. He was popular with religious conservatives.
But during his watch, the libertarian leg of Reaganâs stool was virtually non-existent.
So why, ultimately, did the last Republican administration fail so terribly in advancing conservatism? Because Bush-Cheney represented a Republican Party completely void of libertarian influence.
Those eight years reminded us that where the conservative movement has been the least conservative is also where it has been the least libertarian.
Being libertarian means, first and foremost, holding the ideological position that government is undesirable. Liberals generally hold the ideological position that government is a democratic force for social change and justice, and thus, a positive good. Libertariansâand most conservatives, in most erasâhave considered government positively bad: A leveling force that squelches creativity, natural diversity, inhibits the free market and hampers human innovation.
When President Obama or Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid accuse libertarian leaning Republicans of being âthe party of no governmentâ or âanarchists,â their accusations are factually ridiculous. But however perverse, they do denote an anti-government libertarian component that had theretofor been lacking in the GOP.
Goldwater and Reagan also emphasized this. Unfortunately, Goldwaterâs brand of liberty was too extreme for America in 1964. Even so, as a product of Goldwater and that history, Reagan famously declared in 1975 that libertarianism was the âheart and soul of conservatism.â
One could argue that Goldwater-Reagan conservatism is outdated and in some ways it might be. Different eras call for different policies and ideas. But it is quite another thing to argue that limited government philosophyâthe core of historic American conservatismâis outdated. I know very few conservatives who would say this.
If surveying the rightâs ideological history, Goldwaterâs vision, Reaganâs revolution and Bushâs failure all point to one hard-to-ignore fact for any conscious conservative: It is no doubt possible to be a libertarian without being a conservative. But it is, by definition, impossible to be a conservative without also, to some degree, being a libertarian.
In fact, Reaganâs axiomâthat âgovernment is not the solution to our problem, government is the problemââis the eternal libertarian mantra.
Is it a “failure” if someone doesn’t do something he never promised to do? Both Bushes marketed themselves as compassionate conservatives — the older talking about “a kinder, gentler America,” his son promising to reform education, which doesn’t necessarily mean smaller government. And after 9/11 there wasn’t much interest in the topic of smaller government anyway.
At the risk of offending readers who may be their fans: The Huckabee/Santorum version of the Republican Party does not deserve your vote. That part of the GOP doesn’t believe in freedom of any sort.
The person who coined (as far as I know) the term “conservatarian,” Tim Nerenz, posted on Facebook:
Many of us “right-libertarians” (as opposed to left-libertarians) were Goldwater Republicans back when we were still welcome within the GOP. If conservatives and libertarians would compromise and focus on the 75% of things we both support, it would be an unbeatable coalition. Free trade, limited government, individual liberty, private property – FLIP. Flat or Fair Tax, 2nd amendment, right to work, deregulation, border security, reform of LEGAL immigration, energy independence, school choice, FED reform, elimination of corporate welfare – why can’t we get all that stuff done and then rip each other’s guts out over the things we disagree about? …
Reagan did not win landslides because he had the best and slickest “gotcha” operatives; he won because he both explained and embodied principles that a majority of Americans support. As the article states, it all begins when liberty, not government, is the first principle.
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