By JACK HUNTER
Now that Mitt Romney has lost, virtually everyone
agrees that the Republican Party needs to change. Liberals say the GOP needs to
become more moderate. Conservatives say it has become too moderate. In a way,
both sides are right — and wrong.
The moderate Republican ticket that liberals and GOP establishment types
covet has been tried recently: Mitt Romney and John McCain. Conservatives
are right that a more moderate Republican Party is not the answer.
What many of them are wrong about is conservatism. To turn on talk radio
or watch Fox News is not to experience the philosophy of Bill Buckley, the
rhetoric of Ronald Reagan, or even something like the free market proposals of
Jack Kemp. Aside from Paul Ryan’s proposals for entitlement reform—one of the
few tangibly conservative and positive differences that separated the Romney
and Obama tickets—the populist Right remained stuck on stupid: The President
“apologizes” for America; the U.S is threatened by Sharia Law; “Where’s the
birth certificate?” Obama eats dog. Donald Trump. Dinesh D’Souza.
Demagoguery, partisanship, and conspiracy theories do not represent
ideas. They represent a lack of them. Throw in some clumsy language about
“legitimate rape” and couple it with Romney’s Dubya impression on foreign
policy, and Americans saw a “conservatism” they didn’t want. Who can blame
them?
But they don’t necessarily want Barack Obama’s America either. Voters
weren’t in love with George Bush when they rejected John Kerry. They just liked
Kerry less. On paper, Democrats should have lost, if sour economies and high
unemployment still have anything to do with how people vote. That Romney
couldn’t beat Obama says far more about the Republican Party than it says about
the Democrats.
The formula for victory is not being more Democrat-lite or neocon-heavy.
It also does not lie in embracing socialism or abandoning social issues. The
GOP can become a national party again by offering new ideas rooted in old ones.
Since the 2010 elections, “constitutional conservative” has become a popular
term for some Republicans, who actually set out to distinguish themselves from
the Bush-era. But what does it mean?
The purpose of the Constitution is to limit the federal government. The
core definition of being a conservative in the United States, traditionally, is
a belief in small government. At its inception, the Tea Party was perceived
primarily as a movement against government spending and debt, and majorities of
Americans were on board. A 2009 Rasmussen poll showed that 51 percent of Americans
viewed the massive Tax Day protests that year favorably. As late as January
2011, the Los Angeles Times reported: “A new Gallup Poll
out this morning finds that 71 percent of Americans, even many who do not think
highly of the ‘tea party,’ say it’s important that Republicans should take its
positions into account.”
Those who now blame Republican losses in this election on the Tea Party
are not blaming the philosophy of limited government. They are blaming a
movement that has become associated with too many issues besides limited
government, including the social issues on which the early movement remained
neutral.
But how should a constitutional conservative approach social issues? In
this election, voters approved gay marriage in four states. Two states voted to
make recreational marijuana legal. A true constitutionalist recognizes that the
regulation of marriage and drugs is not found in the Constitution; therefore
the 10th Amendment
renders these the jurisdiction of the individual states. Conservatives have
made such cases against federal healthcare and gun regulation for some time.
They should now be consistent and comprehensive in their constitutional
arguments — even when they might disagree with the outcomes.
While polls show that Americans are more accepting of same-sex marriage
and relaxed drug laws than ever before, the Washington Post reported in May that a Gallup poll
showed: “The 41 percent of Americans who now identify themselves as
‘pro-choice’ is down from 47 percent last July… Fifty percent now call
themselves ‘pro-life…” The Post continued:
The polling shows that rather than embracing abortion with increasing gusto, Americans—especially young Americans—are rejecting it with increasing disgust, and not just for religious reasons.
Roe v. Wade has long been the heart of the pro-life movement, which if
overturned would allow the states to decide the abortion issue. States are now
deciding on the issue of gay marriage and drugs in ways that wouldn’t have been
politically possible a decade ago. As public attitudes shift on abortion, so
may the politics—and constitutional conservatives could stand ready to make the
most effective pro-life arguments in the history of the movement.
If youth attitudes could shift the abortion debate, the same could be
true concerning our greatest financial drain: entitlements. Unlike their
parents, younger Americans do the math and do not expect Social Security and
Medicare to survive. The same could be true concerning youth attitudes toward
the second greatest drain on resources: A counterproductive and costly foreign
policy. Unlike their parents, young people can comprehend an America that does
not play policeman or provider to the world while the next generation foots the
bill.
A platform of constitutionally limited government, individual freedom,
and personal responsibility could provide fresh answers to the old questions
that now impede the GOP’s electoral success. This is not a departure from
conservatism but a return to it.
Or the Republican Party can keep recycling Bush-isms—promising more
government, war, and less freedom. Constitutional conservatism is the way
forward. Conservatism defined as simply hating Democrats will remain a ticket
to nowhere.
The lesson of 2012 is that the Republican Party must truly become the
limited government party it has always pretended to be—or it will die.
No comments:
Post a Comment