Posted on 04/30/2007 9:15:18 AM PDT by Jean S
Why, just now, would we be discussing whether conservatism has run out of gas? The answer is obvious: the Democratic sweep in the 2006 elections.
But, my conservative readers will quickly say, the election was not about conservatism, it was about the Republican Party. That party, they will insist, is a flawed representative of conservatism, and if the party was a better representative, things would have gone well.
That claim is partly true, but fully misleading. Foreign policy conservatismdefined as a vigorous response to terrorism and to terrorist regimesdid take a drubbing.
But the fact is that the Republican Party must be the representative of conservative ideas in American politics or else nobody will. Or at least, nobody with the power to make conservative ideas anything more than the arcane notions of an impotent fringe.
Viewed from this perspective, the 2006 election was about the best thing that could have happened to the Republican Party, and therefore to conservatism.
Lord Acton was doubtless correct when he said that power corrupts. But he could have added: possession of power in a democracy comes with a lot of baggage, and that baggage (like useless items in ones attic) accumulates over time. The 2006 housecleaning, imposed on Republicans by the voters, will be seen in retrospect as a boom.
It is now the Democrats who are accumulating the baggage. Consider the pitfalls that have afflicted that party in Congress.
Democratic baggage, in other words, is building up. They have accumulated quite a lot given how new the 110th Congress is. And there is no reason to think that over time the party will get better ideas, or more competent leadership, or more cohesion in pursuing its agenda.
So where does this leave the Republicans? Out of power, and with little chance of achieving any policy agenda. But that, right now, is a healthy place for them to be.
Sooner or later, the Republicans will be back in power. Thats the way American politics works. What will be their strategic position against the Democrats? And most importantly, how are the Republicans doing in the War of Ideas?
The answer is: pretty well. Its not exactly that the Republicans have new ideas. Republican ideas about welfare reform were enacted in the 1990s. School choice is an idea that, in the modern era, dates back to Milton Friedmans Capitalism and Freedom.
Its just that, if Republican ideas are getting a bit old, Democratic ideas are a lot older. Compared to school choice, throwing more money at the current public school monopoly seems downright quaint.
While medical saving accounts to help people pay for their own medical care isnt a new idea, the liberals lust for socialized medicine goes back at least to 1948, when a Labour government in Britain imposed that system on the country.
While the American public doesnt yet know enough economics to oppose the Minimum Wage, the Democrats support for organized labor seems downright quaint. And their support for the trial lawyers seems downright sleazy.
Privatization of Social Security is not an idea whose time has comeyet. But the increasing number of Americans whose retirement benefits are based on defined contribution (the employer pays into a fund that the employee owns and controls) rather than defined benefit (the employee has a promise of lavish benefits in the future if the lavish benefits dont drive the company into bankruptcy) is likely to whet the appetites of future generations of retirees.
The now-decreasing government deficit and (by the standards of the past few decades) historically low unemployment should dampen the zeal of a fair number of moderates for tax increases.
On issues like gay marriage and the death penalty, Republicans represent robust majorities of public opinion against the liberal elites. On abortion, Republicans represent the conservative half of a public split down the middle. And a majority of Americans continue to oppose racial preferences. If Republicans can muster the courage to appeal to that majority, it will be a boon.
In a democracy, nothing guarantees that good ideas win. It depends on committed activists, capable party leaders, sympathetic public intellectuals, the emergence of good candidatesand sometimes a fair amount of luck. But conservatives hardly face any enduring or insurmountable difficulties.
John McAdams is an Associate Professor of Political Science at Marquette University.
[i] The term slow-bleed was not Murthas, but was used to (accurately) describe Murthas position by John Harris of Politico.com.
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