The new spirit in
a rising climate of anti-politics has become an attitude, rather than a
movement
By Edward Luce
Robert Nozick, the
late US libertarian, smoked pot while he was writing Anarchy, State and Utopia.
He would applaud the growth of libertarianism among today’s young Americans.
Whether it is their enthusiasm for legalised marijuana and gay marriage – both
spreading across the US at remarkable speed – or their scepticism of
government, US millennials no longer follow President Barack Obama’s cue. Most
of America’s youth revile the Tea Party, particularly its south-dominated
nativist core. But they are not big-government activists either. If there is a
new spirit in America’s rising climate of anti-politics, it is libertarian.
On the face of it
this ought to pose a bigger challenge to the Republican party – at least for
its social conservative wing. Mr Obama may have disappointed America’s young,
particularly the millions of graduates who have failed to find good jobs during
his presidency. But he is no dinosaur. In contrast, Republicans such as Rick
Santorum, the former presidential hopeful, who once likened gay sex to “man on
dog”, elicit pure derision. Even moderate Republicans, such as Chris Christie,
who until last week was the early frontrunner for the party’s 2016 nomination,
are considered irrelevant. Whether Mr Christie was telling the truth last week,
when he denied knowledge of his staff’s role in orchestrating a punitive local
traffic jam, is beside the point. Mr Christie’s Sopranos brand of New Jersey
politics is not tailored to the Apple generation.
The opposite is
true of Rand Paul, the Kentucky
senator, whose chances of taking the 2016 prize rose with Mr Christie’s dented
fortunes last week. Unlike Ron Paul, the senator’s father, who still managed to
garner a large slice of the youth vote in 2008, Rand Paul eschews the more
outlandish fringes of libertarian thought. Rather than promising an
isolationist US withdrawal from the world, he touts a more moderate
“non-interventionism”. Instead of pledging to end fiat money, he promises to
audit the US Federal Reserve – “mend the Fed”, rather than “end the Fed”. Both
find echo among the Y generation. So too does his alarmism about the US national debt. Far from being
big spenders, millennials are more concerned about US debt than other
generations, according to polls. They are also strongly in favour of free
trade. More than a third of the Republican party now identifies as libertarian,
according to the Cato Institute. Just under a quarter of Americans do so too,
says Gallup.
All of which looks
ominous for Ted Cruz, the Texan
Republican whose lengthy filibuster against Obamacare last year lit the fuse
for the US government shutdown. Mr Cruz, also a 2016 aspirant, leads the
pugilistic wing of the Republican party that is prepared to burn the house down
in order to save the ranch. Although also a Tea Partier, Mr Paul is cultivating
a sunnier Reaganesque optimism that draws on the deep roots of US
libertarianism. His brand of politics also strikes a chord with those who fear
the growth of the US
surveillance state – the types who view Edward Snowden (another millennial) as a hero
rather than a traitor. Last year the US House of Representatives came within 12
votes of passing a bill to defund the National Security Agency. Mr Paul led the
bill in the Senate. Next time they could succeed.
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