By Kevin D. Williamson
Wednesday, July 02, 2025
With economists as with Buicks, it isn’t the years—it’s
the mileage.
I want to write that Larry Summers is too old to run for
the Democratic presidential nomination the next time around—in fact, he is only
70, basically a teenager by the senescent standards of recent American
politics: Donald Trump’s next birthday will see him turn the big eight-oh, and
goodness knows what kind of North Korean-level parade he’s going to stage for
that nice round number. But Summers seems older than he is, and he seems to
have developed a slight slur to his speech that has the ring of the cruise-ship
buffet line about it, a slight tic that was on display during a recent
conversation with the
Harvard Business Review podcast crew—a conversation that laid bare
another, more serious political deficiency for Summers:
He is too smart to be the Democratic nominee in 2028.
Young Zohran Mamdani and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez do not
have that problem, and neither does youthful 50-something Gavin Newsom, who
seems to remain in a perpetual state of being (like another famous Californian)
tanned, rested, and ready, albeit in his case that’s ready to say something
stupid. Summers, the poor wretch, seems to spend a fair amount of time
thinking about things—and if there is anything we have learned in the past
decade, it’s that there is no political future in that.
The former treasury secretary and Harvard president
retreats into business-school banalities from time to time (“smart businesses
are going to maintain flexibility”) and sometimes falls into talking his book
(he is selling the notion that AI is going to be the most important
technological development of his lifetime, which is not an entirely surprising
view coming from a man who sits on the board of OpenAI) but his economic
views are generally sound, and he is surprisingly good at communicating them—I
write surprisingly because he is a creature of academia and politics,
where intellectual clarity goes to die. He is a guy who can explain to a
general audience what an inverted yield curve is, why it matters, that it is a
symptom of underlying economic assumptions and not a cause of economic change
in and of itself—in only a few lines. It shouldn’t be such a remarkable
sensation, but it is, to think: “Oh, here’s someone who knows what the hell he
is talking about.”
Summers also seems to get the Democratic political
moment—which is, I assume, why he gives no indication that he is running for
anything. The Democrats have invested far too heavily in an increasingly narrow
and exclusive (exclusive being the last thing you want to be if you’re
running for office) model of identity politics and, as Summers observes, in the
politics of envy. He insists on the unfashionable truth that the phenomena that
made billionaires of Bill Gates and Jeff Bezos were, on the whole, better for
the people of the United States, who also were enriched by the businesses those
men built and the innovations they brought to market. That the Democrats are so
focused on economic resentment rather than economic aspiration is particularly
bananas at this particular juncture in political history, when their party,
once dominated by farmers and blue-collar workers, has overtaken the
Republicans as the Alex P. Keaton party—the natural political home of educated,
affluent, upwardly mobile urban and suburban professionals.
The Democrats have long relied on identity politics for
African Americans, Asian Americans, Latino Americans—what they need to develop
is an identity politics for Audi Americans. As Barry Goldwater once put it in a
less happy context, you hunt where the ducks are.
The Democrats probably aren’t going to get a lot of
Buckley-Reagan conservatives into their tent beyond the ones they’ve already
got—and they don’t need to. I myself am a social conservative, but my positions
are minority positions, and it should not be too hard to articulate an approach
to public affairs that is attractive to those who do not share (or who actively
dislike) the typical Republican approach to the so-called social issues, who do
not share the GOP’s increasingly rural-to-exurban orientation and its
identification with voters who are less educated and less affluent, who do not
despise American cities and the people who live in them, who do not hold our
universities—and Silicon Valley, and Wall Street, and Hollywood, and the notion
of decent governance itself—in utter contempt, who do not have an ideological
objection to paying a little more in tax to help put the government on stable
fiscal footing, who understand the value of trade and global engagement, who
probably don’t read The Economist but who wouldn’t find much to object
to in its pages, etc.
And what are the Democrats talking about? The dolt in New
York whose big idea is Soviet-style
state grocery stores.
Comrade Larry does not fit very comfortably into that
particular Diego Rivera mural. He has something to say, but it is not clear
that he has anyone to say it to—or that the Democrats have been beaten badly
enough to hear sense at all.
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