By Jonah Goldberg
Wednesday, September 13, 2023
Last week Mike Pence gave
a speech at Saint Anselm College that, depending on your view of the
man, was either courageous or desperate—or both.
Titled “Populism v. Conservatism: Republicans Time for
Choosing,” the speech was an homage to his hero, Ronald Reagan who, in 1964,
gave a nationally televised
address, “A Time for Choosing,” on behalf of Republican presidential
candidate Sen. Barry Goldwater. That hopeful and optimistic primer on modern
conservatism marked the beginning of the Gipper’s rise as the political leader
of the American conservative movement.
Pence earned a lot of “amens” from me as someone who’s
been railing for years against
the corrupting influence of populism on the right. “Today,” Pence
said, “a populist movement is rising in the Republican Party. This
growing faction would substitute our faith in limited government, and
traditional values for an agenda stitched together by little else than personal
grievances and performative outrage.”
I couldn’t agree more, except for one thing: That
movement isn’t “rising.” That movement is risen.
Elsewhere, Pence describes populism as an “ideology” akin
to progressivism. While there’s a robust academic debate about populism’s
definition, I think Pence’s description of a politics of “personal
grievances and performative outrage” —neither of which constitute an
ideology—offers a better definition.
Defenders insist populism is merely a “rhetorical
style” that valorizes “the people” or—in some variants—“the producers” i.e. the
“little guy” crushed under the heel of the state or big business. Critics of
populism—like me—argue that populism is best understood as the exploitation or
cultivation of anger and fear among a subset of the public. In “What
Is Populism?” Jan-Werner Müller, a politics professor at Princeton,
describes populism as both a form of identity politics and a “degraded form of
democracy that promises to make good on democracy’s highest ideals (‘Let the
people rule!’).”
That’s populism’s gimmick. It claims the small-d
democratic language of “we the people” but usually defines “we the people” not
as all Americans but a privileged political or cultural identity. As
Trump once
put it, “the only important thing is the unification of the people—because
the other people don’t mean anything.”
Populism’s biggest drivers are upstream of
politics—fueled by everything from educational fads about self-esteem,
victimization, and entitlement to widespread distrust in institutions and an
epidemic of conspiratorialism, all amplified by social media and traditional
media alike. America has been a petri dish for the populist bacillus for years.
Democracy is the expression of contested political
preferences through orderly elections and responsible republican institutions.
Conservatism is a body of principles that, as Pence explained, are more
enduring than “passing public opinion.” Populism, taken to its extreme, is
public opinion in the form of mob passion. And mobs see any impediment to their
will as illegitimate.
All populisms are anti-elitist, but historically, what
distinguished left-wing and right-wing populism was which elite they were angry
at. Left populists aim their rage at “Big Money,” banks, and railroads (and,
occasionally, Jews).
Populists on the right rail at “Big Government” and other bureaucratic elite
institutions— foundations, universities etc.—that keep “the people” down (Jews
sometimes pop-up in their demonology,
too). Occupy Wall Street was left-wing populism, the Tea Parties, right-wing.
But as the demonization of Big Tech suggests, there’s ample overlap.
A little populism can be healthy. Anger at perceived
injustice—by Wall Street or Washington—can fuel civic participation and
illuminate legitimate grievances. But unalloyed populism is the politics
of demagoguery or rabble-rousing.
Mark Antony waving Caesar’s bloody toga to incite the mob is the performance
of a populist demagogue. Trump’s incessant incitement of his followers’
outrage on his behalf is the modern equivalent.
Pence is right about populism’s threat, but his
political problem is that he comes so very late to the game. Pence campaigns as
a Reagan conservative who was “proud to serve” in the Trump administration,
right up until it tried to subvert the Constitution on January 6. Pence rode
the populist Trump train while it served his purposes. He deserves praise for
refusing to make that train a battering ram and for, however belatedly, bearing
witness to the party’s plight. But prior to his disembarkation, vast swaths of
the right—from CPAC to
the Heritage
Foundation to most conservative media—surrendered to populism. I
certainly hope Pence succeeds in getting Republicans to reverse course. But a
better time for choosing was when the Trump train was still in the station.
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