Lessons of History?
By Thomas Sowell
It used to be common for people to urge us to learn
"the lessons of history." But history gets much less attention these
days and, if there are any lessons that we are offered, they are more likely to
be the lessons from current polls or the lessons of political correctness.
Even among those who still invoke the lessons of
history, some read those lessons very differently from others.
Talk show host Michael Medved, for example, apparently
thinks the Republicans need a centrist presidential candidate in 2012. He said,
"Most political battles are won by seizing the center." Moreover, he
added: "Anyone who believes otherwise ignores the electoral experience of
the last 50 years."
But just when did Ronald Reagan, with his two
landslide election victories, "seize the center"? For that matter,
when did Franklin D. Roosevelt, with a record four consecutive presidential
election victories, "seize the center"?
There have been a long string of Republican
presidential candidates who seized the center -- and lost elections. Thomas E.
Dewey, for example, seized the center against Harry Truman in 1948. Even though
Truman was so unpopular at the outset that the "New Republic"
magazine urged him not to run, and polls consistently had Dewey ahead, Truman
clearly stood for something -- and for months he battled for what he stood for.
That turned out to be enough to beat Dewey, who simply
stood in the center.
It is very doubtful that most of the people who voted
for Harry Truman agreed with him on all the things he stood for. But they knew
he stood for something, and they agreed with enough of it to put him back in
the White House.
It is equally doubtful that most of the people who
voted for Ronald Reagan in his two landslide victories agreed with all his
positions. But they agreed with enough of them to put him in the White House to
replace Jimmy Carter, who stood in the center, even if it was only a center of
confusion.
President Gerald Ford, after narrowly beating off a
rare challenge by Ronald Reagan to a sitting president of his own party, seized
the center in the general election -- and lost to an initially almost totally
unknown governor from Georgia.
President George H.W. Bush, after initially winning
election by coming across as another Ronald Reagan, with his "Read my
lips, no new taxes" speech, turned "kinder and gentler" -- to
everyone except the taxpayers -- once he was in office. In other ways as well,
he seized the center. And lost to another unknown governor.
More recently, we have seen two more Republican
candidates who seized the center -- Senators Bob Dole in 1996 and John McCain
in 2008 -- go down to defeat, McCain at the hands of a man that most people had
never even heard of, just three years earlier.
Michael Medved, however, reads history differently.
To him, Barry Goldwater got clobbered in the 1964
elections because of his strong conservatism. But did his opponent, Lyndon
Johnson, seize the center? Johnson was at least as far to the left as Goldwater
was to the right. And Goldwater scared the daylights out of people with the way
he expressed himself, especially on foreign policy, where he came across as
reckless.
On a personal note, I wrote a two-line verse that
year, titled "The Goldwater Administration:"
Fifteen minutes of laissez-faire,
While the Russian missiles are in the air.
Senator Goldwater was not crazy enough to start a
nuclear war. But the way he talked sometimes made it seem as if he were. Ronald
Reagan would later be elected and re-elected taking positions essentially the
same as those on which Barry Goldwater lost big time. Reagan was simply a lot
better at articulating his beliefs.
Michael Medved uses the 2008 defeat of tea party
candidates for the Senate, in three states where Democrats were vulnerable, as
another argument against those who do not court the center. But these were
candidates whose political ineptness was the problem, not conservatism.
Candidates should certainly reach out to a broad
electorate. But the question is whether they reach out by promoting their own
principles to others or by trying to be all things to all people.
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