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Buchanan's surefire flop. Home Bound
The New Republic ^ | July 11, 2002 | Franklin Foer

Posted on 07/13/2002 1:32:00 PM PDT by Torie

Buchanan's surefire flop. Home Bound by Franklin Foer

Post date 07.11.02 | Issue date 07.22.02

It can't be a good omen for Pat Buchanan. The man who will now carry the pitchfork for his "America First" peasant populism is a European aristocrat. Taki Theodoracopulos (or Taki, as he signs his byline), scion to a Greek shipping fortune, will fund and contribute essays to Buchananism's new house organ, The American Conservative (TAC), a Washington-based biweekly set to launch this September. It is, to say the least, an odd match. While Buchanan venerates the working class, Taki is an unabashed yacht-owning, nightclub-going social snob with homes in the Swiss Alps, London, and Manhattan's Upper East Side. While Buchanan rails against the fraying of God-fearing, law-abiding, traditional American culture, Taki was convicted in 1984 for smuggling cocaine. His most penetrating meditation on American cultural decay was a 1982 essay in The American Spectator titled, "Why American Women are Lousy Lovers."

Still, this unlikely pair is bound by a common goal: to rescue American conservatism from the false gods of internationalism, immigration, free trade, and Zionism. And Buchanan's disastrous 2000 presidential run notwithstanding, as recently as one year ago there was reason to believe such a mission might elicit popular support. After all, in his quest to woo Hispanics, George W. Bush floated a blanket amnesty for Mexican immigrants--an idea that sparked a sharply negative reaction from the conservative grassroots. He called fast-track trade authority a top priority and declared himself "committed to pursuing open trade at every opportunity," despite evidence that the American right was souring on free trade. He reneged on campaign promises to pull U.S. troops from Bosnia and Kosovo. And against conservative orthodoxy, he embraced the spirit of multiculturalism, hardly lifting a finger to undo affirmative action and apparently practicing it himself, packing his Cabinet with minority appointments. In short, the most corporate president in recent history seemed the perfect foil for the anti-corporate conservatism Buchanan had been preaching for years.

And at first glance, September 11 seemed to add fuel to Buchanan's critique. What better evidence for Fortress America than the spectacle of visa-finagling foreigners blowing up lower Manhattan? Buchanan wrote a quickie book, The Death of the West, about the swarthy menace; and across Europe his brand of nativism began harvesting votes in record number. But over time it has become clear that on this side of the Atlantic, 9/11 hasn't boosted the isolationist right; it has extinguished it. Instead of America Firstism, September 11 has produced a war on terrorism that has virtually ended conservative qualms about expending blood and treasure abroad. And as a corollary, it has produced an unprecedented eruption of conservative and evangelical support for Israel. The conservative establishment has co-opted post-9/11 fears of Muslim immigration, and Bush has covered his protectionist flank on trade. In short, Buchanan and his rich friends couldn't have chosen a worse time to start a journal of the isolationist right.

AC thinks conservative support for the war on terrorism is hollow; indeed it plans to make the issue its raison d'etre. According to Scott McConnell--a former editorial-page editor of the New York Post, an heir to the Avon cosmetics fortune, and TAC's third proprietor--"Garden-variety conservatives pretend that the movement speaks with one voice on foreign policy. But foreign policy represents a significant fissure among conservatives. [TAC] will challenge the orthodoxy." It would be more accurate to say it used to represent a significant fissure among conservatives. In late-'90s debates over the Balkans, for instance, a growing number of congressional Republicans broke from the internationalism of GOP elders like Bob Dole and George H.W. Bush and echoed Buchanan's 1999 critique of America's "utopian crusades for global democracy." One year later Tom DeLay delivered a speech at a Washington think tank decrying Clintonite foreign policy as "social work." And Trent Lott took to CNN to accuse the president of neglecting diplomacy, urging him to "give peace a chance" in Kosovo. Even some normally hawkish neoconservatives like Charles Krauthammer condemned the Balkan interventions as "a colossal waste--and drain." A poll in late 1999 taken by Mark Penn showed that 57 percent of Republicans considered the United States "too engaged in the world's problems."

Buchanan has continued that line of argument. Then, he argued the United States had no right to interfere in Balkan tribal feuds. Now he writes, "Where does Bush get the right to identify and punish every [terrorist] aggressor? Who believes any president can lift the `dark threat' of aggression and terror from all mankind?" But no one on the right is listening anymore. A "CBS News" poll from last month shows that 94 percent of Republicans approve of the president's handling of the war. If anything, the conservative critics of Bill Clinton's foreign policy--Krauthammer and DeLay among them--are demanding that Bush intervene more aggressively to root out global terrorism, starting with Yasir Arafat.

The Buchananite critique has fallen flat for three reasons. First, the Clinton administration justified its interventions as humanitarian necessities. In the war on terror, by contrast, Bush hasn't needed to appeal to altruism. He has employed the rhetoric of national interest--fulfilling the Buchananite criteria for intervention. And, in the process, he reestablished the connection between national security and the hawkish internationalism that defined conservatism during the cold war. Second, Bush has preempted charges of Wilsonian internationalism by obsessively guarding against encroachments on national sovereignty--yanking the United States out of the Kyoto agreement on global warming, raising objections to the International Criminal Court, and ditching the anti-ballistic missiles treaty. Thirdly, the Buchananites have shot themselves in the foot by blaming September 11 on America's "indiscriminate support for Israel" (McConnell's words in the New York Press last fall) and pining for the days "when America was loved by Arabs" (Taki's words, also in the Press). TAC's supporters have the misfortune to be espousing anti-Zionism at the very moment the conservative rank and file, driven by evangelicals, views Israel as America's kindred spirit in the battle against terrorism and radical Islam. According to the most recent batch of polling, 64 percent of Republicans say they actively sympathize with Israel--as opposed to 38 percent of Democrats. And 83 percent of Republicans applaud Bush's aggressively pro-Ariel Sharon policy on the Middle East.

he rest of the political landscape is equally inhospitable to Buchananism. Trade--an issue on which Beltway conservatives and grassroots conservatives genuinely were out of step--has lost much of its salience now that national security, not economics, dominates foreign policy debates. With Senate Democrats adding the Dayton-Craig labor protections to trade promotion authority, Bush has threatened to veto the legislation altogether, leaving the Buchananites nothing to shout about in the short term. And when the administration has tinkered with trade policy, it has done so in Buchananite ways--raising tariffs on domestic steel, supporting a farm bill loaded with subsidies for U.S. agriculture, and generally proving that Karl Rove is far too in touch with electoral reality to leave Bush vulnerable to protectionist attack.

Bush and the conservative mainstream have also masterfully preempted the anti-immigration backlash Buchanan would like to foment. Although Bush still talks about tolerance for Muslims and even tried to restore food-stamp benefits to legal aliens, he has endorsed a major overhaul of the border patrol, tougher enforcement of student visas, and a fingerprinting system that amounts to racial profiling. Similarly, pro-immigration magazines like The Weekly Standard and National Review have turned racial profiling and a tougher visa system into crusades, leaving Buchanan and his allies little room to accuse the conservative establishment of sacrificing American security for political correctness and cheap labor. When McConnell told me that the American right considers immigration a "verboten issue," he sounded as if he hadn't touched the stack of magazines by his bed for months.

The way the Buchananites see it, they're still battling the neocons--the largely Jewish group of former leftists who migrated right after the Vietnam War. But the neocons are no longer a wing of the conservative movement; they are the conservative movement. Supply-side economics, Israel, welfare reform, vouchers--all the old neocon pet causes have become enshrined in conservative conventional wisdom. As Norman Podhoretz triumphantly declared in The New York Times in 2000, "The time has come to drop the prefix and simply call ourselves conservatives." This presents a huge problem for the Buchananites: There's no constituency on the right--not evangelicals, not gun nuts, not libertarians--who wants to send the neocons back to City College or who even remembers they came from there. It's a fact McConnell seems to acknowledge when he lumps together National Review, FOX NEWS, and George W. Bush as the "neoconservative orthodoxy." There's barely anyone left on the right to embrace TAC.

There is, however, one group that shares the Buchananite docket of suspicions--of Wall Street, capitalism, Zionism, American power: the anti-globalization left. Indeed, Buchanan has fitfully wooed them. He marched in the streets at the 1999 Seattle protests of the World Trade Organization, and he has spoken at labor rallies against free trade. During his 2000 presidential bid, he said he hoped to turn the Reform Party into the "Peace Party." Some of his aidesde-camp have gone further, taking Buchananism to its logical left-wing conclusions. Justin Raimondo, an adviser to Buchanan's 1996 campaign and a historian of the old right, runs Antiwar.com. The site posts screeds against American interventionism that complain about "empire" and "increased military spending." And by lifting the language of the left, he has acquired an audience on the left: The Nation's Alexander Cockburn has published a column on the site, and Salon and alternative newsweeklies plug his work. For his part, Raimondo is unabashed about his ideological transformation. Last month he wrote on his site, "The only voices of dissent are heard, today, on the Left. ... This is where all the vitality, the rebelliousness, the willingness to challenge the rules and strictures of an increasingly narrow and controlled national discourse has resided."

And Raimondo is not the only one trying his hand at far-left/far-right synergy. On the University of California, San Diego, campus, David Duke's supporters have distributed flyers on "Israeli genocide." Lefty Pacifica Radio broadcasts right-wingers who rail against elites, including recordings of the late conspiracy theorist Anthony Sutton. Thomas Fleming, the editor of the paleocon Chronicles, told me, "I agree with environmentalists on chain stores, fast food, and the Americanization of Europe. I don't even bother calling myself a conservative anymore." Over the course of the '90s the anti-globalization critique that started on the right with Buchanan's 1992 and 1996 presidential runs migrated left. And 9/11, which has forever linked opposition to globalization to opposition to the war on terrorism, was the final straw. The Buchananites may not want to admit it, but in the post-9/11 era, as during the cold war, the prominent critiques of American internationalism will come from the left. TAC contributor Sam Francis says he has already privately advised the new magazine "to forget about the social issues" that divide them from their anti-globalization comrades on the left. Announcing the magazine in a New York Press column, Taki wrote: "Our motto for the magazine is that we are traditional conservatives mugged by the neocons." He'd be better off trying something different: closer to, say, "Workers of the world, unite!"


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Editorial; Extended News; Philosophy
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Comment #81 Removed by Moderator

To: Scorpio
Your points are polemical, but not particularly offensive. Number 1 rather misses the mark however (I have yet to meet a neocon that supports the Bush farm bill), and number 5 is hilariously wrong. Neocons invented opposition to quotas and in favor of tort reform (the latter via all those evil think tanks that provided the empirical economic case). Government waste of course is in the eye of the beholder. Some think steel quotas are waste, other don't, for example.
82 posted on 07/13/2002 5:24:05 PM PDT by Torie
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To: Scorpio
Sounds good!

Of course, I don't know if I am a 'neo' or a 'paleo', but I am a conservative.

I agree with many things Buchanan says, but most of all I agree concerning immigration. Illegal immigration goes to the heart of so many important issues in this country - defense, economics, education, law enforcement. It is destroying our communities and American way of life and is being encouraged and protected by our own President. That is the most frightening of all.

Many people will never admit to agreeing with anything Buchanan says (even if they do wholeheartedly) because the news media has portrayed him as a laughing stock and few people are going to stand up and agree with someone publicly that the news media has attempted to neutralize by making him look foolish.

83 posted on 07/13/2002 5:25:24 PM PDT by nanny
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To: nanny
well said, surely we can all agree that there is an immigration problem(legal and illegal).
84 posted on 07/13/2002 5:29:52 PM PDT by sonofron
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To: Torie
Good point. In spite of the heated political rhetoric, this may go down in history as another Era of Good Feelings (I've already seen the years 1989-2001 labeled the "Lost Decade," a period of happy oblivion between crises, like the Twenties or the Fifties).

Pat's problem is that the discontents of a decade ago were buried by a decade of real or apparent prosperity. Even if the economy turns worse, it will probably kill off a new magazine before things turn Pat's way again.

You could well be right about socialized medicine. I suspect some kind of stopgap measure will prevent or delay our going whole hog in that direction. But there are other destablizing issues around the corner as well.

When people will be able to buy the kinds of genes for their kids that they want, it will shake up the country in a way that we haven't seen for some time. If one can buy for one's children every potential genetic advantage, it turns libertarian ideology inside out. That, at least, seems to be Francis Fukuyama's view.

85 posted on 07/13/2002 5:41:03 PM PDT by x
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Comment #86 Removed by Moderator

To: Torie
Genocide? HAHAHAHAHA!!!! Such NWO propaganda! And the ethnic cleansing is going on RIGHT NOW. The Albanian Mooslim terrorists that Clintoon supported are ethnically cleansing Serbia's Jerusalem, Kosovo, of Serbs, Turks, Jews, and Gypsies. Quick question, Torie: if Slobo was so intent on "ethnic cleansing", why didn't he start in Belgrade, the most ethnically diverse city in the former Yugoslavia? Why did he never engage in it there?

Sounds like you are going along with Amanpour's "program".

And, even if your premise was true- which it is not- that still doesn't answer my question; how was this America's business? What right did we have?

87 posted on 07/13/2002 5:47:30 PM PDT by Phillip Augustus
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To: Scorpio
The first link which you provided is the best resource on the 'Net. I urge everyone, and can't do it emphatically enough, to review that site.
88 posted on 07/13/2002 5:49:18 PM PDT by Phillip Augustus
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To: Phillip Augustus
I answered your question. You just didn't like the answer.
89 posted on 07/13/2002 5:53:42 PM PDT by Torie
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To: Torie
Er, not THIS neocon, and in general I don't think so, certainly not now, where McCain is going off the reservation almost totally. He's even joined in with the gang in hanging up Bush's judge nominations for heavans sake.

Your answer reaffirms my distrust for neocons as the proper approach to your general squishiness. You tiptoe around without ever having the confidence to express what you really think.

That's one characteristic that Pat B. has over your ilk in spades....he has the balls to tell you what he really thinks...even when he's dead wrong and you know it, I know it, and he knows it.
90 posted on 07/13/2002 5:55:55 PM PDT by wheezer
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To: wheezer
You tiptoe around without ever having the confidence to express what you really think.

This one is a keeper. I have many character flaws. I never considered the above one of them, nor has anyone else whom I have come across until you. Frankly, I don't think you know me very well, or are very familiar with my posting history.

91 posted on 07/13/2002 5:58:50 PM PDT by Torie
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To: Torie
Answer this question, then, if you would: how is stopping "mass ethnic cleansing and genocide" America's duty? Or do you actually believe that America is to be the policeman of the entire world? Since you are an admitted neo-con, I suppose the last query was superfluous.
92 posted on 07/13/2002 5:59:05 PM PDT by Phillip Augustus
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To: Phillip Augustus
It is a glorious aspect of American values and power that we have both the will and the means to stop such things sometimes. A moral nationhood is more than just about ourselves in a narrow minded sense. More universal values are at stake. It is one reason I love this country so much. Yes, we dropped the ball in Cambodia, and that is a black mark. We are the closest thing yet in the history of this planet to a shinning city on a hill, but not yet alas co-extensive with it.
93 posted on 07/13/2002 6:03:49 PM PDT by Torie
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To: Torie
And it often ends in tragedy, especially when aid evil forces, against Christians, as we did in the Balkans. We stabbed Western Civilization in the back by siding with Muslim terrorists over Christian Serbs. Some payback the Serbs received for "guarding the gates" of the West for centuries against the Islamic hordes.
94 posted on 07/13/2002 6:07:35 PM PDT by Phillip Augustus
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Comment #95 Removed by Moderator

To: zhabotinsky
I am misunderstanding. Are you suggesting that Buchanan is plagarizing speeches from Otto von Bismarck? Or the Kaiser? Certainly, not Hitler, as Buchanan is as far from a National Socialist as one can be.
96 posted on 07/13/2002 6:46:53 PM PDT by Phillip Augustus
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To: Torie
You are one cynical person. I thought I was cynical, but you take the cake with your revisionist Clintonist history. Slobo fell by electoral means and he would have fallen sooner if the dear Albanians had not boycotted the prior elections (a little noted fact from the Clinton/neocon axis of situational ethics) not by our wasting billions blowing up power plants and bridges.

FYI Chilton Williamson one of those "obsolete" conservatives has the perfect critique of our immigration policy and the neo-cons obliviousness to its hazards in this month's Middle American News.

97 posted on 07/13/2002 7:14:59 PM PDT by junta
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To: junta
It was a rather messy election as I recall. As I recall, some post election activities proved necessary. But hey, I am not here to try to persuade you of anything. Have a good evening.
98 posted on 07/13/2002 7:17:04 PM PDT by Torie
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To: junta
Middle American News is another good reference. I urge everyone to read that source, as well as the aforementioned VDARE.
99 posted on 07/13/2002 7:30:13 PM PDT by Phillip Augustus
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To: Phillip Augustus
MAN bump It is a good source as will Pat's new venture.
100 posted on 07/13/2002 7:36:41 PM PDT by junta
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