By Kevin D. Williamson
Wednesday, August 27, 2025
Perhaps you’ve heard this famous anecdote about Adlai
Stevenson, the liberal intellectual who had the bad political luck to be the
Democrats’ nominee to take on Dwight Eisenhower in both 1952 and 1956: An
admirer assured him, “Every thinking person in America will be voting for you,”
and Stevenson, who wasn’t a fool, quipped, “I’m afraid that won’t do—I need a
majority.”
(Eisenhower won 39 states in 1952 and then 41 the next
time around—and there were only 48 of them back then.)
When I find myself in a majority, I try to figure out
where I went wrong. I do think there is something to Margaret Mead’s
advice—“Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can
change the world; indeed, it’s the only thing that ever has”—even if she
overstates the case. To be a conservative in 2025 is to be politically
homeless—but perhaps not entirely politically friendless.
It has been something to watch such figures as Ezra Klein
and Matthew Yglesias conclude that their professional time is best spent trying
to force upon fellow progressives an understanding of a few necessary truths,
i.e., that if we built a lot more houses, there would be a lot more houses.
Klein has even gone as far as to acknowledge some of the century-old (or older)
lessons to be had from public-choice economics and the work of the Austrian
economists (e.g., that people who have much to gain by shaping regulations will
put a lot more work into doing so than people who have nothing to gain) though
he sometimes writes as though these were ideas without ancestries, as though he
deduced them for himself two weeks ago. Still, more joy in Heaven and all that.
Writing at The
Causal Fallacy, Charles
Fain Lehman of the Manhattan Institute notes the case of a writer
associated with Klein’s “abundance” liberalism, former Vox contributor
Kelsey Piper, encountering some unpleasant facts of life, namely that a growing
mountain of rigorous research
shows that cash transfers are a form of welfare that does not contribute
very much to the welfare of beneficiaries, that the main observable result from
money benefits is that recipients work a bit less, while other metrics ranging
from health to education to quality of parenting show no improvement. “These
are careful, well-conducted studies,” Piper writes.
“They are large enough to rule out even small positive effects and they are all
very similar. This is an amount of evidence that in almost any other context
we’d consider definitive.” Lehman points out some signposts on the road ahead:
This doesn’t mean that policy
can’t do things. It can, and often does. But as a general rule, when it does it
does so through simple channels that involve shifting people’s incentives,
rather than trying to change people as people. And because those channels are
few and far between, we should expect policy that tries to do the hard work of
changing people to mostly fail.
There’s actually a term for this
line of critique, as applied not merely as an evaluative insight but a
political one. That term is “neoconservatism.”
Long before it took on today’s pejorative sense, it referred to a group of
previously left-of-center intellectuals who were persuaded, largely by their
encounters with actually existing government policy as implemented under the
Great Society, that policy rarely worked, often backfired, and reliably could
not change who people are.
Over at his Substack,
Cass Sunstein comes around to a deeper appreciation of some old philosophical
adversaries: “I like [F. A.] Hayek a lot less ambivalently than I once did, and
[Ludwig] von Mises, who once seemed to me a crude and irascible precursor of
Hayek, now seems to me to be (mostly) a shining star (and sometimes fun, not
least because of his crudeness and irascibility). The reason is simple: They
were apostles of freedom. They believed in freedom from fear.” Just as the
political environment of the 1980s and 1990s informed Sunstein’s evaluation of
the work of Hayek and Mises, who were very much informed by the 1930s and
1940s—the age of Stalin and Hitler—so, too, do recent political developments
force a redrawing of the political-philosophical map that was first drawn up
during the Cold War. “Liberalism is a big tent,” Sunstein concludes, one big
enough to include many of those former opponents. “It’s much more than good to
see them under it. It’s an honor to be there with them.”
Conservatives alienated from the Republican Party (as
conservatives must be) may make their peace with the Democratic Party, as some
have, but many (I suppose most) cannot muster much more than an “Ugh!” for a
party whose moderate wing is characterized by Joe Biden and whose radical camp
is rallying behind Zohran Mamdani, the professing socialist who aims to be not
only the next mayor of New York City but also the new mascot of the left wing
of the party of the left. But while there probably are not many estranged
liberals who feel about the Democratic Party precisely the way conservatives
are obliged to feel about the current Republican Party—in part because the
Democrats are not at this moment led by a man who attempted a coup d’état
the last time he lost an election—they are frustrated and disappointed and, at
times, full of very reasonable contempt for their ancestral party. Liberals
acknowledging painful truths of an uncomfortable ideological origin—whether
those be Hayekian or neoconservative in character—have something in common with
conservatives reckoning (as we must) with the fact that unsavory constituents
such as racism, millenarian religious fanaticism, xenophobia, nihilistic
antirationalism, and old-fashioned bumptiousness play a much more prominent
role on the right than we had supposed.
There are other stirrings to regard, some of them abroad.
Chancellor Friedrich Merz of Germany’s conservative Christian Democratic Union
is having a moment
of welcome frankness: “The welfare state that we have today can no longer
be financed with what we produce in the economy.” As the editors of the Wall
Street Journal note, that kind of candor is not heard from Trump’s
imitators on the other side of the Atlantic—neither from Marine Le Pen in
France nor from
Nigel Farage in the United Kingdom nor from many others of that tendency.
At home, the party of Donald Trump—the party of J.D.
Vance and Ted Cruz and Marco Rubio and Tucker Carlson, not to mention supposed
normies such as Mike Pence, et al.—currently is engaged in answering a question
I hadn’t thought anyone was asking: “What would national socialism look like if
antisemitism were less
of a political priority?” Meanwhile, the Democrats are flirting with
democratic socialism, which I suppose is having a vote about whether to
liquidate the kulaks as a class. Not great. And, yet, there are voices
from the left taking seriously arguments about the limits of government
planning, about regulatory capture, about letting markets work, about
addressing progressive priorities such as climate and health care costs through
innovation rather than exclusively through the ol’ one-two of regulation and
subsidy.
That minority of thinking people who endorse such
“globalist” priorities as international trade and collective security are
effectively without political representation in either party. The
spending-cutters and the tax-raisers are warily eyeing one another across the
gulf of our national debt and starting to admit that each camp is going to be
forced to accommodate the other if anything is to be done to head off fiscal
calamity. There is a quiet emerging consensus that the campus radicals and the
little commissars of the HR department have gone too far in sundry daft
crusades that are mirrored on the right by the jihad against (I remind you,
gentle reader, that I am not making this stuff up) “gay
race communism” down at the Cracker Barrel marketing department.
As Sunstein notes, there is a word for what we have in
common: liberalism. That liberalism encompasses individual rights and
liberty, a free economy, the rule of law, transparency and accountability in
government, political equality, checks and balances, etc. As it happens, the
most important book in the liberal tradition was published within a few months
of the most important event in the liberal tradition: March of 1776 saw the
publication of The Wealth of Nations, and the Declaration of
Independence announced the American Revolution in July of that blessed year.
The liberalism described by Adam Smith and Thomas Jefferson is a great part
(though not all) of what American conservatism is meant to conserve.
It is what Trump and his movement mean to gut.
And if there is an emerging liberal minority that can
help stand in the way of Trump and his epigones, then there is political work
to be done. I am sure that it would not take me long to find much to disagree
about with Cass Sunstein or Kelsey Piper or—and this part I am especially
confident about!—Matt Yglesias.
But Donald Trump? J.D. Vance? I wouldn’t trust either man
with my dachshund, much less my country.
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