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It Could Be A Long Time In The Wilderness

by @ 5:32 pm on November 11, 2008. Filed under 2008 Election, Politics, Republicans

In today’s New York Times, David Brooks details the coming battle between the “traditionalist” conservatives who are arguing that the GOP lost last week because it didn’t go far enough to the right, and what Brooks calls the Reformers:

The other camp, the Reformers, argue that the old G.O.P. priorities were fine for the 1970s but need to be modernized for new conditions. The reformers tend to believe that American voters will not support a party whose main idea is slashing government. The Reformers propose new policies to address inequality and middle-class economic anxiety. They tend to take global warming seriously. They tend to be intrigued by the way David Cameron has modernized the British Conservative Party.

Moreover, the Reformers say, conservatives need to pay attention to the way the country has changed. Conservatives have to appeal more to Hispanics, independents and younger voters. They cannot continue to insult the sensibilities of the educated class and the entire East and West Coasts.

The Reformist view is articulated most fully by books, such as “Comeback” by David Frum and “Grand New Party” by Ross Douthat and Reihan Salam, as well as the various writings of people like Ramesh Ponnuru, Yuval Levin, Jim Manzi, Rod Dreher, Peggy Noonan and, at the moderate edge, me.

Brooks argues that, in the short run at least, the Traditionalists are going to win the battle because they control Washington, the think tanks, and, most importantly, the mythos:

Members of the conservative Old Guard see themselves as members of a small, heroic movement marching bravely from the Heartland into belly of the liberal elite. In this narrative, anybody who deviates toward the center, who departs from established doctrine, is a coward, and a sellout.

This narrative happens to be mostly bogus at this point. Most professional conservatives are lifelong Washingtonians who live comfortably as organization heads, lobbyists and publicists. Their supposed heroism consists of living inside the large conservative cocoon and telling each other things they already agree with. But this embattled-movement mythology provides a rationale for crushing dissent, purging deviationists and enforcing doctrinal purity. It has allowed the old leaders to define who is a true conservative and who is not. It has enabled them to maintain control of (an ever more rigid) movement.

In short, the Republican Party will probably veer right in the years ahead, and suffer more defeats. Then, finally, some new Reformist donors and organizers will emerge. They will build new institutions, new structures and new ideas, and the cycle of conservative ascendance will begin again.

Is Brooks right ?

Well, if a victory for the “Old Guard” in a fight over the rotting caracass of the GOP means that the party moves even further to the right on social issues, then, yes, I think he’s absolutely right. If last week’s election proved anything, it proved that the Republican Party has become increasingly out of touch with a growing swath of the voting public.

As long as that remains the case, they’re going to find themselves in the minority.

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3 Responses to “It Could Be A Long Time In The Wilderness”

  1. Phil C. says:

    Personally, I beleive a return to “60 percent issues” like the GOP did in 1994 would be refreshing…which would mean a fiscal movement to the right, and hands off the social issues.

  2. Gerson, Brooks, Frum, et al. are not conservatives in any form. The GOP has actually drifted pretty far from the ideas of Taft and Goldwater. That’s why it keeps losing.

  3. Taft and Goldwater would be unwelcome in the contemporary GOP while theocratic lawbreakers like Roy Moore are lionized by it.

    The social conservatives are killing the GOP.

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