By Andy Smarick
Friday, September 24, 2021
Over the last number of years, parts of America’s
political Right seem to have forgotten, pushed aside, or just given up on many
of the governing principles that defined American conservatism for generations.
Though the political circles backing nationalism, populism, industrial
planning, Trumpism, or common goodism aren’t coterminous, there is one
significant area of overlap: Compared to those on the right a decade ago, they
are more open to a more managerial, muscular, free-spending Uncle Sam and less
energized about distributing authority to states, localities, and
nongovernmental bodies.
Now that the progressives controlling Washington are pushing
a New Deal–Great Society–style agenda centralizing power and sporting a jaw-dropping
price tag, conservatism finds itself in a bind. It’s hard to be taken seriously
as anti-statist after you’ve been flirting with statism. One type of response
you might hear is along the lines of, “But our expensive, centralizing,
managerial proposals are better than their expensive, centralizing, managerial
proposals.” But American conservatism has not been and should not become a
different flavor of power consolidation. The key to defeating progressives’
hyper-ambitious plans and crafting an inspiring, politically successful agenda
of our own is picking up and dusting off the governing principles we’ve
recently neglected.
Conservatism always begins with the beliefs,
institutions, and policies that have worked for a particular people in a
particular place. So American conservatism is not contemporary Hungarian
conservatism or 1979 Iranian conservatism or 17th-century English conservatism
or twelfth-century French conservatism. America was founded on concepts such as
religious freedom, ordered liberty, egalitarianism, democratic-republicanism, and
enumerated governmental powers. Its character was shaped by immigrant courage,
the pioneer spirit, the promise of endless opportunity, and a vibrant civil
society. It grew to be a continental nation with more diversity than any other
on the globe.
This is a unique, complicated combination of factors. A
super-computer couldn’t devise the right habits, norms, and organizations to
make it function well. Only experience could do that. American conservatives’
commitment to personal virtue, voluntary associations, self-government,
localism, federalism, capitalism, and textualism is the consequence not merely
of an understanding of human nature. That is, American conservatism doesn’t
flow solely from appreciating human fallibility, understanding natural law, and
valuing prudence. It results from centuries of trial and error in the real
world — understanding the American experience and the American people in
America.
American conservatives don’t protect individual liberty,
foster civic organizations, and distribute government power just because. We
don’t oppose technocracy, socialism, and adventuring judges just because. We
aim to conserve such beliefs and practices because they are essential here.
American success requires nurturing personal responsibility and civic virtue;
fidelity to nonstate action, positive law, and close-to-home governing; and
respect for an array of cultures and traditions.
Consolidated power, centralized tinkering, and a bulky,
bossy Washington are incompatible with American conservatism because the
American character and the American experience teach us that they are
incompatible with American success.
About a decade ago, something healthy, even exciting,
started percolating on the right. No longer satisfied with the policy agenda
that had become popular in the 1980s, some started floating new proposals. “Reform conservatives” were an important part of this movement.
This renewal project was important because, as I’ve written before, too many on the right had confused policy and
principles. That is, tax cuts and deregulation are certainly one manifestation
of American-conservative thinking; in fact, these were policy ideas consistent
with our governing principles and perfectly suited to the post–Great Society
era.
But tax cuts and deregulation are just one manifestation
of American-conservative governing principles. By continuously pushing these
policies regardless of the circumstances, our agenda grew stale and our
policy-development muscles atrophied. We needed ideas both consistent with our
intellectual tradition and responsive to the times. The Tea Party, at its best,
seemed to herald this very thing. It was a timely reaction to the swelling
federal spending and power concentration of the early Obama era, and it
advocated less spending and distributed power.
Similarly, re-reading “reformocon” documents, I was struck by that group’s desire to address
contemporary problems in new ways while remaining faithful to
concepts such as personal responsibility, limited government, and a thriving
civil society. Indeed, as Peter Wehner wrote at the time, “Conservatives today
need to show Americans how the principles that led to successful solutions when
applied to the problems of that era can do the same when applied to the rather
different problems of this one. The same principles applied to new problems
will yield new solutions.”
But things took an unfortunate turn. Rather than saying,
“We need to derive fresh policy ideas from American-conservative governing
principles,” some on the right just abandoned conservative governing
principles. Yes, we needed to stop pushing worn-out proposals; no, that doesn’t
mean we needed to give up on virtue, originalism, and liberalism and start
supporting I-alone-ism, giant federal budgets, tariffs, industrial policy,
federal child allowances, and so on.
There is nothing wrong with criticizing “zombie Reaganism”
or the “dead consensus” if the goal is clearing away decades of
exhausted thinking and reasoning anew from American-conservative governing
principles. There is, however, something wrong with ignoring those principles
and reasoning from vague sentiments such as “help the family,” “support
workers,” or “strengthen America.” That can, as we’ve seen, lead to an agenda
that neglects states, localities, civil society, and pluralism;
super-charges Washington;
expands government spending; and elevates technocrats.
The greatest challenges of our time can be addressed by
an energetic American conservatism. Legitimate concerns about the
disproportionate power of out-of-touch, condescending elites can be solved by
distributing authority, opposing technocracy, and trusting practical wisdom.
Frustration over our loss of community and solidarity can be solved by
catalyzing local mediating bodies, respecting traditional ways of life, and
preserving pluralism. Dealing with our international competitors and addressing
our border problems comes from focusing Uncle Sam’s attention on the narrow set
of issues only he can manage.
This era could have and should have led to a bounty of
creative, practical solutions consistent with our time-tested principles.
Instead, too many on the right fell prey to the lures of a bellicose,
centralizing populism; followed the decidedly unconservative whims of Donald
Trump; and engaged in hot-headed, unproductive Twitter, cable-news, and
Substack wars. So now, when progressives are offering up bank-breaking, cradle-to-grave federal initiatives, the right can
look flat-footed when asked why consolidating money and power in Washington is
suddenly a bad thing. Worse, we have too few sensible, practical proposals on
hand that would address today’s family, community, and cultural problems
through decentralization and civil society. And we have too few public leaders
with a track record of successfully governing consistent with the principles of
American conservatism.
It is fashionable in some right-of-center circles
nowadays to denigrate the “establishment” and “proceduralism.” It is true that old networks can get
chummy, self-serving, and sclerotic and that focusing too much on process can
distract us from our desired ends. But every conservative should know that
radicalism and amateurism are waiting in the wings when we fire time-tested
institutions, norms, and rules of thumb. The governing principles of American
conservatism reflect the American character and have evolved based on the
American experience. They contain the accumulated wisdom of those who’ve come
before and governed before us. They should not be discarded blithely. They can
tell us why and how to resist this period of progressive strength in
Washington, and they can tell us how best to address America’s current problems
once this period concludes.
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