What time is it? Are we living in normal times or revolutionary times? Is the greatest threat to American conservatism today a Walter Mondale-style big-government liberalism? Or is it a woke revolutionary progressivism that seeks to utterly transform the American way of lifeâour politics, culture, economy, law, education, morality, manners, and mores? A recently-issued Statement of Principles, co-signed by a group of advocates for Freedom Conservatism, assumes we are living in the world of the former: the world of Reagan vs. Mondale.
To be sure, the FreeCon statement is benign. Friends with whom I agree on 95 percent of all issues have signed the document. It affirms the principles of individual liberty, the pursuit of happiness, private enterprise, the free market, the rule of law, equality of opportunity, secure borders, and a ârational immigration policy.â That is the text. Whatâs not to like? There is, however, a subtext, explained by Avik Roy (the main organizer of the statement) in a National Review essay.
Roy makes it clear that the purpose of the document is to repudiate the National Conservatism Statement of Principles (issued last year), of which I was a signatory, along with the tenets of National Conservatism and the New Right more broadly. And so, as Roy suggested, let us examine the significant differences between what is being touted as Freedom Conservatism (or what in Europe and Canada would be liberal conservatism) vs. National Conservatism.
Neither the FreeCon statement nor Royâs essay evinces any awareness of the powerful adversary that American conservatives and âAmericanistsâ more generally face in the summer of 2023. By âAmericanistsâ I mean those conservatives and patriotic liberals who advocate the affirmation, improvement, and perpetuation of the American way of life. The opposite of an Americanist would be a Transformationist, one who seeks to fundamentally transform the United States of America.
The FreeCon statement refers vaguely to âauthoritarianismâ on the âriseâ at âhome and abroadâ and those on the âleft and rightâ who ârejectâ the âdistinctive [American] creed.â But who exactly are these adversaries? The FreeCons offer us no sense of the moment in which we are living inâno sense of the threat to (and enmity for) historic America emanating from the powerful woke progressive revolutionary regime that has âmarched through the institutionsâ and conquered the administrative state, the media, universities, public schools, foundations, transnational corporations, weaponized security agencies, and the Democratic Party.
On the contrary, National conservativesâboth in their statement of principles and in the commentary of prominent signatories (Christopher Rufo, Rusty Reno, Victor Davis Hanson, Yoram Hazony, Josh Hammer, Roger Kimball, Michael Anton, John OâSullivan, and others)âhave repeatedly spelled out the nature of the existential threat to American (and Western) civilization from a new adversary, a 21st-century form of revolutionary Jacobinism and cultural Marxism. This means the so-called âculture warâ is much more fundamental to our way of life than it is portrayed by our media (including Fox News). Indeed, we are in a full-blown civilizational and regime conflict.
Examining agreements and disagreements, Avik Roy notes that âNatCons and FreeCons are both gravely concerned about Critical Race Theory and radical gender ideology in elementary schools.â Roy grudgingly admits that âNatCons have pushedâsuccessfully in some casesâfor states to pass lawsâ that counter woke progressive ideology in education.
âSuch policies,â he suggests, âmay have their utility, but FreeCons have advanced a more durable approach: enacting universal education-savings accounts, so that every parent gains the freedom to educate their children the right way.â Education-savings accounts are a good idea, but we are not confronted by a binary choice. âMay have their utilityâ? Why does Roy belittle the efforts of democratically elected conservative governors and state legislators like Ron DeSantis in Florida, Bill Lee in Tennessee, and Glenn Youngkin in Virginia to combat and restrict the advance of woke ideology in taxpayer-funded public education?
Roy talks about âeliminat[ing] DEI excessesâ in private and public spheres. âExcessesâ? What would be an appropriate level of DEI? There is none: DEI is a pernicious anti-American ideology based on a cultural Marxist characterization of our nation as the story of perpetual (racial-ethnic-gender) conflict between âoppressorsâ and âoppressed.â By its nature, it cannot be moderated or reformed. It must be annihilated root and branch from all corners of American life.
Freedom Conservatism claims the legacy of the Sharon Statement, adopted by the Young Americans for Freedom at William F. Buckleyâs home in Sharon, Connecticut in September of 1960. Yet, major Sharon principles are missing in the July 2023 document.
The Sharon Statement affirms âcertain eternal truthsâŚ. That foremost among the transcendent values is the individualâs use of his God-given free willâŚâ (emphasis added). Unlike in both the Sharon Statement and the National Conservatism Statement of Principles, âtranscendent valuesâ and âGodâ are nowhere to be found in the Freedom Conservatism Statement, which reads:
Among Americansâ most fundamental rights is the right to be free from the restrictions of arbitrary force: a right that in turn derives from the inseparability of free will from what it means to be human (emphasis added).
Also missing from the FreeCon document is Frank Meyerâs original fusionist conception of the symbiotic relationship between the two fundamental principles of freedom and virtue. There is no mention of virtue (neither Christian, nor Hebraic, nor Greco-Roman) in the FreeCon statement. Nor, incredibly, is there any reference to patriotism as one of the ten fundamental principles of American conservatism!
In the 1980s and 1990s, conservatives touted the political fusionist coalition of the âthree-legged stoolâ: economic conservatism, national security conservatism, and social conservatism. In the new July 2023 definition, one of the legs has atrophied. The core concerns of social conservatism (as Jay Richards admits) are clearly missing. On the contrary, the National Conservatism Statement puts nation, religion, culture, virtue, and patriotism front and center.
Roy draws a clear distinction with National Conservatism on immigration. âFreedom conservatives,â he proudly announces, âembrace legal immigration.â As the statement itself puts it, âimmigration is a principal driver of American prosperity and achievement.â
The FreeCon document declares rather vaguely that we should âdesign a rational immigration policyâ while also somehow securing our borders. This, of course, tells us nothing about what the actual policy should look like. On the other hand, the NatCon statement does not obfuscate but is forthright: âWestern nations have benefitted from both liberal and restrictive immigration policies at various times. We call for much more restrictive policies until these countries summon the wit to establish more balanced, productive, and assimilationist policies.â
Evidently, the FreeCon statement authors sought to stake out a position on immigration that would not deter those worried about the current effects of American immigration policy, while at the same time remaining loose enough to reassure the supporters of so-called âcomprehensive immigration reformâ (basically, mass amnesty plus a continuing and expanding supply of cheap labor). It is no accident that Grover Norquist, Jeb Bush, and mass immigration enthusiasts associated with Koch-funded organizations such as the Niskanen Center and The Bulwark readily signed on to the FreeCon statement.
On civil rights, Roy maintains that âwhile FreeCons and NatCons agree on the importance of opposing racial discriminationâŚFreeCons go further, by recognizing the persistent inequality of opportunity for descendants of the victims of slavery and segregation.â The FreeCon statement âcommit[s] to expanding opportunityâ for âvictims of this system [who] now face economic and personal hurdles that are the direct result of this legacyâ (i.e., the system of slavery and segregation â[p]rior to 1964.â) What does this mean, and how is this different from some form of affirmative action, which the FreeCon document explicitly rejects?
For answers we must look to Royâs previous comments on civil rights. In January 2021 Roy stated that âconservatismâs low pointâ was the Goldwater candidacy and the movementâs âabsenceâ from the civil rights initiatives of the 1960s.
He writes: âJust as an unfaithful spouse can save a marriage only through honest atonement, conservatives will regain the trust of right-leaning African Americans only by frankly and forcefully acknowledging our movementâs past mistakes.â
Several years earlier, in the fall of 2016, âover a mug of skim-milk cappuccino,â Roy told left-wing journalist Molly Ball, âIf we arenât going to confront that history [i.e., Goldwater in 1964] as conservatives and Republicans, we donât deserve minority votes.â Roy further told Ball, âTrump showed me that white identity politics was the dominant force driving the Republican grass roots.â
In another interview in 2016 with Vox journalist Zach Beauchamp, Roy stated, âUntil the conservative movement can stand up and live by that principle [i.e., racial equality], it will not have the moral authority to lead the country.â Roy told Beauchamp that âconservatism has become, and has been for some time, much more about white identity politics than it has been about conservative political philosophy.â
Instead of a focus on limited government and economic conservatism, Roy declared, âIn reality, the gravitational center of the Republican Party is white nationalism.â
In February 2021, in American Greatness, Ethics and Public Policy scholar Pascal-Emmanuel Gobry wrote a polite yet devastating critique of Royâs January essay. Gobry notes, âRoy would like conservatives to apologize for the 1960s and embrace liberal pieties on race.â He adds that âthis sort of racial self-flagellating is a play for the approval of discourse-gate keeper elites, not of actual voters.â Instead of âacquiescingâ to âthe fraudulent racial narrative pushed by woke elites,â Gobry retorts, conservatives should denounce this narrative on both âsubstantiveâ and âpolitical grounds.â
Citing Christopher Caldwellâs thesis in The Age of Entitlement, that the civil rights legislation of the 1960s led to the creation of a rival constitution in direct conflict with the traditional American Constitution of 1789 to the mid-1960s, Gobry argues (correctly) that âby now conservatives should be unashamed to say openly that civil rights-era legislationâ and related court decisions âhave been, to say the least, a mixed blessing.â
With the Freedom Conservatism project Roy hopes to create a winning political coalition that updates the Reagan coalition. Yet, revealing open contempt for conservative voters as âwhite nationalistsâ and seeking to evoke guilt over conservatismâs history, while calling for âatonementâ from conservative leaders and the grassroots, seems an unlikely formula for ideological and political success.
Avik Roy is optimistic that the FreeCons can achieve ideological hegemony over their intra-conservative rivals, the NatCons. He tells us, ânational conservatives know that they will never represent anything more than a cantankerous minority factionâââa faction of cranks.â But FreeCon booster Matthew Continetti is more pessimistic. He laments, âcandidates who reflect National Conservative views command 78 percent [i.e., DeSantis, Vivek Ramaswamy, and Donald Trump] of the National GOP primary vote. That is a sign of a party transformed. And the transformation may well accelerate. A lot of the energy behind National Conservatism comes from young people.â
Roy clings fervently to what he purports to be Reaganâs legacy, but his FreeCon vision is more of a return to Paul Ryanism than to Reaganism. Paul Ryan could never be described as a culture warrior, nationalist, or populist. But Ronald Reagan could.
For many, the election of 1980 was a victory for traditional American cultural values and a repudiation of the antinomian â60s Left. Certainly, in facing down the New Left student radicals at Berkley as Governor of California, Reagan acted as a proto-culture warrior. Running against President Ford in the Republican primary on the issue of relinquishing American control of the Panama Canal, he sounded not simply like an âAmerica is an ideaâ patriot, but a defiant âdonât tread on meâ Jacksonian nationalist: âwe bought it, we paid for it, itâs ours, and we should tell Torrijos and company that we are going to keep it.â
Unlike their errant sons decades later, the founding fathers of neoconservatism in the 1970s and early 1980s characterized Reagan as a nationalist.
Norman Podhoretz called Reaganâs election in 1980 a triumph for a ânew nationalism.â Irving Kristol described Reagan as coming ââout of the West,â riding a horse, not a golf cart, speaking in the kind of nationalist-populist tonalities not heard since Teddy Roosevelt, appealing to large sections of the working class.â
Reagan negotiated a free trade agreement with Canada, and his rhetoric extolled the benefits of free trade. But he also used tariffs and exerted pressure on foreign importers when he believed protectionist policies best served the American people. William Niskanen, a free trade economist who served on Reaganâs Council of Economic Advisers, wrote in his book Reaganomics: An Insiderâs Account of the Policies and the People that âthe [Reagan] administration imposed more new restraints on trade than any administration since Hoover.â
Niskanen continued, âWhile his messaging was often contradictory, Reaganâs actions proved him to be an assertive protectionist for most of his termâŚ. [Reagan] also placed punitive tariffs on Japanese electronics and motorcycles [this was the famous rescue of Harley-Davidson]. He invoked a variety of laws to restrict trade in industries such as steel, footwear, lumber, and sugar.â Overall, the share of American imports covered by trade restrictions increased under Reagan from 8 percent in 1975 to 21 percent by 1984.
In short, Reaganâs conception of freedom and, for that matter, the definition of conservatism from early powerhouse intellectuals including James Burnham, Harry Jaffa, and Willmoore Kendall is at odds with the 2023 FreeCon version and the liberal conservatism it represents.
Roy ends his essay with an attempt at verbal jujitsu aimed at the NatCons and New Right: âWhen FreeCons win this debate, and NatCons ask us what time it is, weâll have a simple answer: Once again, itâs morning in America.â
Unfortunately, America has changed politically, economically, culturally, legally, demographically, temperamentally, morally, religiously, and spiritually since 1984. Our common adversaryâs revolutionary campaign against the America for which we share a love requires a sophisticated counter-revolutionary response, not a repetition of the talking points from the Republican platforms of the 1980s, â90s, and aughts.
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