By Rich Lowry
Friday, August 23, 2024
To listen to the speeches from the podium at the
Democratic National Convention, you’d think Democrats
were handing out Friedrich Hayek’s libertarian classic, The Road to Serfdom,
on the floor.
In recent weeks, Democrats have made a hard pivot to
adopt the rhetoric of freedom, and the tack was particularly pronounced in
Chicago.
The anthem of the convention was the Beyoncé song
“Freedom,” and the Harris campaign unveiled a new ad, “We Believe in Freedom.”
Borrowing an old Republican chestnut, Oprah Winfrey said,
“Freedom isn’t free.”
Pennsylvania governor Josh Shapiro, who has long made
this theme a staple of his speeches, called the Democrats “the party of real
freedom.”
And vice-presidential nominee Tim Walz leaned on this idea heavily, contrasting
Republican freedom that is supposedly all about invading privacy and enabling
corporate polluters with Democratic freedom that protects people’s free choice
and safety. According to the Minnesota governor, his state’s Golden Rule is
“mind your own damn business.”
There are a couple of things to say about this rhetorical
maneuver — one is that it might work in sheer political terms by associating
Democrats with a deeply held traditional American value; the other is that it
is utterly cynical and runs completely counter to the progressive mode of
governance.
It’s as if the pioneering English socialists Beatrice and
Sidney Webb made their slogan, “Live free or die.” Or if the 20th-century
socialist intellectual Michael Harrington began to insist he was a fan of the
work of Milton Friedman. Or if Bernie Sanders displayed the revolutionary-era
Appeal to Heaven flag once favored by Tea Party activists.
It doesn’t add up. Consider Tim Walz, whose record as
governor is not exactly living and letting live. This newfound advocate of
unfettered freedom has done everything he can to increase the ambit of the
Minnesota government.
During Covid, he imposed incredibly strict rules and shut
down schools and churches while providing a snitch line so Minnesotans could
rat out the noncompliant. None of this was voluntary. He has imposed myriad new
taxes, which people obviously can’t choose not to pay. He signed a bill mandating
paid family leave — to be paid for by taxes on employers and employees — and a
bill mandating that Minnesota utilities transition to 100 percent
carbon-free energy by 2040.
As the conservative intellectual William F. Buckley Jr.
once quipped, liberals don’t care what you do, so long as it’s mandatory.
Walz has erroneously suggested that the First Amendment
allows bans on “hate speech,” and he favors prohibiting the most popular rifle
in America in defiance of the Second Amendment. He has never met an economic
regulation he doesn’t like. Needless to say, he doesn’t support school choice
to enable more parents to decide where to send their kids to school,
right-to-work laws that allow employees to decide whether to join a union or
pay its dues, or health savings accounts to give people more control over their
health care.
A libertarian, clearly, he is not.
When the Democrats say “freedom,” they mostly mean
abortion on demand. But this is only a legitimate form of freedom if the unborn
child is wrongly considered a nonentity with no rights or interests of its own.
In Chicago, Democrats often referred to the alleged infringement of freedom
represented by authorities telling children what books to read. They are
referring to decisions made about public-school curricula or what books are in
public-school libraries, determinations that government makes all the time.
Walz himself has imposed new ethnic-studies requirements in Minnesota’s schools
— this may be bad policy, but it isn’t a violation of anyone’s freedom.
The other forms of freedom that Democrats defend —
quality education, public safety, etc. — are public goods, not true expressions
of liberty.
The falsehoods and misunderstandings may not matter,
though. Democrats have sensed an opening as a more populist Republican Party
puts less emphasis on freedom. If Democrats get away with their faux
libertarianism, it will be a notable triumph of the freedom to mislead.
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