GOPocalypse—and the Future of the Right

Posted by Daniel Larison on November 05, 2008

Even before Obama won a resounding victory over McCain and Democratic majorities expanded significantly in Congress, declarations that conservatism was finished had been pouring in from the left as they had in 1976 and 1992. The decimation of the Republican Party over the last two election cycles has left the vehicle for conventional conservative political action horribly damaged, broken and smoldering in the ditch into which the Bush administration and its supporters have driven it.  Without some significant and fairly dramatic adaptation to new political realities, however, the early obituaries of conservatism as a cohesive political force in the United States may finally prove to be correct. There will continue to be some reduced center-right voting coalition, but soon enough it will lose the ability to renew and reproduce itself in anything like its present form.  If nothing is done to counteract it, the generational shift to the political and cultural left among the next generation will reduce conservatives of all kinds to a marginal fraction. 

Just as Republican leaders learned nothing from the aftermath of 2006 and ignored the public’s rejection of the Iraq war, there seems to be no evidence that they understand where they went wrong in backing the war all along or how they contributed to the unfolding financial crisis and recession. For their part, most of the Republican Party base seems certain that it was an inferior, moderate Republican candidate who refused to attack Obama fiercely enough that led to defeat, as if their continued support for the administration and the war had not already helped ensure the last two electoral routs. At the same time, the tremendous grassroots enthusiasm for Sarah Palin suggests that we are seeing the same process of identification with a prominent Republican politician that cemented mainstream conservative loyalty to Mr. Bush.  The flip side of this enthusiasm is that there is clearly deep dissatisfaction with the Republican establishment, and it is not necessarily the case that Palin should or will be the beneficiary of the coming backlash. 

Seeing the political disaster unfolding around them, many of the most prominent apologists and cheerleaders for the administration, along with a few of its former members, have begun to wash their hands of what they helped to create with their belated, public complaints about the direction of the party and the selection of Alaska Governor Sarah Palin as running mate.  This has led some to issue harsh criticism of Palin, but also more broadly to use Palin as the representative of the populist, culture war politics that have long offended them. This has created an odd situation where rank-and-file Republicans, Jacksonian nationalists, cultural populists, immigration restrictionists, and opponents of the bailout have by and large flocked to Palin as their champion, despite her inevitable embrace of all of the conventional establishment views of the presidential nominee on amnesty and the bailout.  Meanwhile, predominantly establishment pundits who find most of Palin’s enthusiasts distasteful or embarrassing have taken advantage of Palin’s genuinely weak performance as VP nominee once again to declare the politics of her supporters to be radioactive and disastrous.

Populist dissident conservatives who have opposed the administration from the outset are better-positioned in terms of credibility and ideas than anyone else to take advantage of the new political landscape, but they are notably lacking in the kind of institutional support and political influence needed to challenge the discredited mainstream and the new technocratic proposals of neoconservative “reformists.” As mainstream, movement conservatism has tied itself to the fortunes of this administration, the movement as a whole is largely at a loss for answers for the future, and for most mainstream activists the answers being put forward by the “reformists” resemble an undesirable effort to resuscitate Bush’s brand of welfarism.  As the Bush years draw to a close, the mainstream seems to be reverting to its Clinton-era self, obsessed with personal associates and conspiracies connected to the future President but lacking anything on par with the ideas that led to welfare reform in the ‘90s.

The purely oppositional, anti-Obama path is tempting, because it is by far the easiest and safest kind of opposition, and it offers certain superficial rewards as the next administration loses public support as administrations tend to do in their first two years. In the long term, however, this is politically futile and intellectually bankrupt. This presents an opportunity for the two disorganized camps of what we can call heterodox conservatives, the populists and the neoconservative “reformists.” Both espouse, in diametrically opposed ways, arguments for adopting policies that serve the interests of Republican working- and middle-class constituencies, and both are viewed with varying degrees of suspicion by mainstream activists, but it is the populists who identify both culturally and politically with these constituents far more.  It is therefore the populists who have the advantage in winning over these constituents directly through grassroots organizing that would build and improve on the example of the limited successes of the Ron Paul campaign.

The McCain campaign’s touting of the virtues of Middle Americans, small towns and the middle-class stood in stark contrast to the policies on immigration and trade that McCain has embraced his entire career that ignore and indeed undermine the interests of Middle America. Thanks to the combative and substance-free “populism” of Palin, the campaign has both failed to represent Middle American interests while simultaneously associating the defense of those interests with lack of knowledge and aimless demagoguery. The populists find the symbolic politics of McCain/Palin vapid and harmful to genuine populist causes, as symbolic, lifestyle populism eschews sharp critiques of the policies that neglect the interests of the many.  This pseudo-populism settles instead for viscerally satisfying vilification of elites while doing nothing to challenge their power or the institutions they control. Opposing consolidated power and concentrated wealth without substantive proposals to distribute and disperse both more widely is at best ineffective and at worst a cruel co-optation of populist language to shore up the political establishment.

The “reformists” have likewise been mortified by the campaign’s incoherence and lack of governing vision, but most have been particularly horrified by the return of this same symbolic, lifestyle populism. Two of the more prominent “reformists,” David Brooks and David Frum, share the same disdain for culture war politics and an aversion to those whom Brooks dubbed “nihilists” for their opposition to the $700 billion bailout, which reflects fairly well their antipathy for social conservatives and the attitudes of Middle American conservatives.  To the extent that those Middle Americans identify with Palin, these particular “reformists” have been indifferent or openly hostile to her as a symbol of the elements on the right they dislike.  This highlights the fundamental political weakness of most of the “reformists,” which is their alienation from the broad mass of conservatives. 

On certain matters of policy, particularly concerning foreign policy and civil liberties, populist dissident conservatives are today at odds with most conservatives’ views, but they have far more in common with them than “reformists” in their shared opposition to mass immigration, legal abortion, expansion of government and, most recently, the massive government intervention in the financial sector. The populists have also long anticipated popular dissatisfaction with the current “free trade” regime, and have advanced arguments against corporate power and collusion between corporations and government that are not only consistent with free market principles but which also resonate with the electorate far beyond the right. 
A decentralist and decentralized populism stands the best chance of going around the gatekeepers of institutional conservatism centered in the Northeast by organizing a parallel movement based in cities and towns throughout the country. Creating institutions of this parallel movement would take time, but they would be at once more focused on state and local government, more responsive to local and regional issues and would be more representative of Middle American conservatives. This decentralized movement would not only be more responsive, but would necessarily also be more accommodating to intellectual and regional diversity.  It would avoid the ideological ossification that afflicts the mainstream movement and would make possible a far greater degree of participation from the people in whose name populist conservatives claim to speak.

Regardless of how one views Sarah Palin herself, the phenomenon of enthusiasm for Palin, like the grassroots mobilization for Mike Huckabee and Ron Paul we saw in the primaries, shows the powerful hunger in Middle America for someone to speak for them and defend their interests.  Except perhaps on immigration, institutional conservatism and elected representatives in the Republican Party have largely failed to do this.  During the primaries, institutional conservatism was content to foist two rebranded Northeastern liberal Republicans on conservatives as their champions while denigrating the two candidates with the strongest grassroots support. As the enthusiasm for candidates as different as Huckabee and Paul shows, Christian conservatives and libertarians are looking for representation. These voters are not going to find it in a mainstream movement that loathes Huckabee and Paul, nor will they find what they seek among the “reformists,” so their support is up for grabs. What populist conservatives need to do in the coming years is to make sure that Middle Americans are presented with a credible, substantive populism from the right that provides a genuine alternative to the left’s agenda and does not settle for the false comfort of empty anti-elitist rhetoric. 

Comments

“LOOKING BEYOND THE ELECTION (March on Washington)
Saturday, January 31 11:00 AM
(Tentatively) The Washington Monument (Washington, DC)
Obama say’s “change comes not from the top-down, but from the bottom-up. The Million Supporters March on Washington is an event to dramitize the urgency… “

http://my.barackobama.com/page/event/search_results?orderby=day&zip;_radius[0]=22309&zip;_radius[1]=15&radius_unit=miles&country=US

Obama and Axelrod may be planning to try to keep Obama’s organization together and continue fund raising right on through his presidency.  They will have call ins to Congress like Fairus, Stein Report, NumbersUSA and others did to stop the amnesty bill.  They will try to shut down Congress if it doesn’t move fast enough.

I liked Sarah Palin a lot, and think she did an OK job as nominee.
But, as a hothouse flower, I think she is now dead politically.  If she had not been nominated and started building a grassroots 2012 presidential campaign, she would have been formidable, even against a President Obama.  But because of the untoward way she was thrust into the national spotlight, her negatives are too high to ever be viable politically on a national level.

“As the Bush years draw to a close, the mainstream seems to be reverting to its Clinton-era self, obsessed with personal associates and conspiracies connected to the future President but lacking anything on par with the ideas that led to welfare reform in the ‘90s.”

Well said. I think the right will soon be kicking over the “Obama is a Muslim....born in Kenya...Communist” claims and this will prove as effective as stories about Bill Clinton raping and killing worked-which is to say it will hurt the attackers more than the attacked.

Posted by Rob on Nov 05, 2008.
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Oh but wait....the rabid little gnome Newt Gingrich is floating the cockeyed idea that he will ride directly to the front and take on the Standard for a new Republican Revolution. Hosannah!… we can again enjoy all this talk of “contracts” for everything from the run-of-mill Pork barrel appropriation to entering the bathroom every morning for a brief but regulated stint on the throne whilst boning up on loyalty anthems.

The GOP, a real zinger of a mean drunk is nothing more , nor nothing less than a giant Black Tableau by S. Clay Wilson with the Checkered Demon quaffing Treefrog Beer and running a felchfest with every special interest known to K Street. My apologies to Mr. Wilson for debasing his work so.

Waiting for ANY of its many hustlers to stage a return to chaste principles of small government is like expecting a Dog to lead the various feral cats skulking about the ruins of the Roman Forum in a brisk rendition of Handel’s Messiah.

One can only hope it will elevate Palin the Warrior Princess and embark upon a racial purity crusade so that it will fade even more quickly into a black gloaming of loathing abandon. Franklin had something like the current GOP in mind when he raised doubts about whether we could keep the Republic we seem so intent to bury. His second example was the current Democrat hoax.

Populism eh? Will there be thrilling uniforms? I do hope so. It makes the cannibalism involved easier to stage-manage.

Please don’t lump Ron Paul supporters in with Palin supporters. Paul supporters were also committed to ‘changing’ the status quo. McPalin epitomized the Bush-politick method of governance.

Ron Paul was a “middle american” candidate?  His support came from young savvy net-types more than anything else.

A ‘conservatism’ free of attachment to a specific people and heritage… hah!

Grow some balls, you guys.

The only conservatism worth defending is one that is correct:  one that says unlimited immigration hurts Americans and America, one that says that most of the federal apparatus that people generally dislike is unconstitutional, one that notes that both the federal government’s fiscal policy and its monetary policy contributed to—cannot ameliorate, but actually brought on—the current economic situation, and one that notes that our inertial foreign policy makes us enemies and costs us both higher taxes and reduced economic prospects.

In other words, what’s needed now is pretty much the Republican platform of 1980 domestically, coupled with the Republican platform of 1800 in foreign policy.  This time around, absent a Cold War to win, we can opt for reduced federal spending, and thus reduced federal taxing and borrowing, all the way around.  In general, Republicans today are committed to Reaganism in the matter of judges; we need a “bring the troops home” leader as figurehead.  Alas, none is on the horizon, but it shouldn’t be hard to find such a person.  I suspect that several House Republicans and governors will pick up this baton.

KRCG: it doesn’t matter that the GOP base or the odd renegade pol knows the foreign policy is wrong - “change” won’t be allowed by tptb. Heck, even Obama went to AIPAC and said he’d go to war with anyone they didn’t like.

David pointed out:  Obama at one time or another has supported:

(A) Reparations.  Redistributing money from European Americans to blacks, mestizos, and Asians.

(B) Criminalizing white parents who refuse to let their children practice miscegenation. 

(C) Using “hate crime” laws to silence any criticism from European Americans.

(D) Using Third World immigration to overwhelm European American majorities.

(E) Expanding anti-white affirmative action programs

Posted by Chris on Nov 06, 2008.
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Very good piece Mr. Larison. The very thing you describe is already taking place in New Hampshire with the Free State Project, a decentralist, populist organization determined to keep New Hampshire from turning into Massachusetts North. Free Staters help to elect four of their group to the state legislature despite the Democratic tidal wave in the state. Check it out here: http://www.freestateproject.org/node/15086.

“Ron Paul was a “middle american” candidate?  His support came from young savvy net-types more than anything else.”

Ron Paul’s supporters came from an unusually diverse array of various walks of life, which is one of the reasons I’m confident he would have carried more states than McCain did, had he been the GOP nominee (not sure anyone could have actually beaten Obama this year, however).

Broosk doesn’t know what nihilism is, or he is counting on us being ignorant. It’s a term that has been used on Buchanan as well.

Too bad Brrosk, and most of Buchanan’s detrators are nihilists.

NOUN:

1. Philosophy
1. An extreme form of skepticism that denies all existence.
2. A doctrine holding that all values are baseless and that nothing can be known or communicated.
2. Rejection of all distinctions in moral or religious value and a willingness to repudiate all previous theories of morality or religious belief.
3. The belief that destruction of existing political or social institutions is necessary for future improvement.
4. also Nihilism A diffuse, revolutionary movement of mid 19th-century Russia that scorned authority and tradition and believed in reason, materialism, and radical change in society and government through terrorism and assassination.
5. Psychiatry A delusion, experienced in some mental disorders, that the world or one’s mind, body, or self does not exist.

Mr. Larison wrote: “The McCain campaign’s touting of the virtues of Middle Americans, small towns and the middle-class stood in stark contrast to the policies on immigration and trade that McCain has embraced his entire career that ignore and indeed undermine the interests of Middle America. Thanks to the combative and substance-free “populism” of Palin, the campaign has both failed to represent Middle American interests while simultaneously associating the defense of those interests with lack of knowledge and aimless demagoguery. The populists find the symbolic politics of McCain/Palin vapid and harmful to genuine populist causes, as symbolic, lifestyle populism eschews sharp critiques of the policies that neglect the interests of the many.  This pseudo-populism settles instead for viscerally satisfying vilification of elites while doing nothing to challenge their power or the institutions they control.”

A very concise summary of the problem with the modern Republican Party---they talk like social populists, but govern on behalf of the oligarchs be it Riverside Drive liberals or Wall Street mogols…

The “culture war” was used effectively to win votes for Republicans since Nixon, but unlike Nixon, the Republicans have done little to protect the economic security of these folks, and precious little to advance the “culture war” they claim to champion.

I’m not sure what the solution is...I agree with Kevin Phillips that the future is increasing disillusionment with politics at all..there is no coherent voice for “populist” conservativism that fights both Wall Street and Park Avenue for the interests of Main Street.

Wht you fail to observe is that the Left is playing the same ‘culture war” game plan thatthe right plays while pusihing the same economic agenda as the Republicans. Obama will be facing a lot of problems in making good on the promises to Blacks and Browns on economic issues, and will increasingly rely on the same “culture war” issues---except in reverse---to persuade the working poor and the minorities to continue to support his power. How long he can continue to do this? I don’t know---but on the other side, there is little hope for him keeping his economic promises---and the prospect on the Democrat side is for increasing disillusionment and disingagement by voters.

America is becoming a third world nation, with the broad masses completely disconnected from the mainstream politics...and into that headly mix, extremism of both the left and the right is given fertile soil to grow.

Why not something serious, like Röpkean localist agrarianism, conservationism, pre-war social traditionalism, isolationism in foreign policy, a strictly European-only immigration policy (excluding Englishmen) ?