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Jan. 29 2010 - 12:36 am | 126 views | 0 recommendations | 9 comments

Scott Brown and the second coming of big tent conservatism

I’ve been a little too hard on conservatives lately – largely due, I think, to my overall frustrations over healthcare reform, but also because of the antics on the right which I find distasteful and discouraging.  Part of what draws me to conservatism is its respect for tradition, restraint and of course the conservative disposition (which I realize is awfully vague and fairly apolitical).  This includes not saying wildly outlandish things or using scare tactics to make your case.  Somewhere along the way, all this has been tossed aside, along with many conservative principles such as limited government (i.e. not “save Medicare from the Democrats”).  Loudmouths like Rush Limbaugh and Glenn Beck dominate the conservative airwaves, and the GOP itself is headed by the inept Michael Steele.  Several weeks ago, after watching that horrible Colbert segment with Andy Schlafly, I let myself sink into despair.

The conservative movement – nay, conservatism itself – was dead (to me, or so I thought).  Or, if not dead, it was damn near.  Andy Schlafly and Sean Hannity were dancing on its grave sputtering nonsense about Jesus and the free market, giving anti-capitalist progressives all the ammunition they’d ever need to spout their own brand of crazy-passionate-yet-uninformed.  What little remained of conservatism’s once robust intellectual movement seemed cordoned off, populated by a few economists, a handful of paleocons and dissidents, and some libertarians.  The neocon’s secret mission to destroy the movement from the inside out was working – had worked.  Game over.

Then came the special election in Massachusetts.  The Scott Brown victory, if nothing else, has restored my faith in the possibility of Big Tent conservatism.  Whatever Brown’s flaws or inconsistencies – and like every politician, they are many – he nevertheless represents a shift away from vapid purity tests and toward a more regionally representative Republican party.  The lesson of the Brown victory is not that moderate/liberal Republicans should be the model for conservative candidates country-wide, but that there should be no status quo at all – no precise model for what works, no one-size-fits-all-conservatism. What works in Tennessee will likely not work in New Yrok (nor should one politician attempt to change their political views entirely to appeal to each of these states consecutively).

Furthermore, Republicans should run more broadly appealing candidates rather than hyper-partisan ones, even if the hyper-partisan candidates are the best at rousing the base.  Republicans can still run very conservative candidates so long as those candidates can speak to a wide swath of voters. – Bob McDonnell in Virginia, for instance, is just this sort of candidate.

Moreover, the liberal reaction to Citizens United (Glenn Greenwald notwithstanding) has made me realize that my recent lack of faith in conservatives/conservatism is more a reflection of my overall lack of faith in humanity/politics. People on both sides of the aisle enforce that lack of faith on a daily basis.  Liberals and progressives can be just as over the top, emotional, and absurd as their conservative and libertarian counterparts.

On the other hand, all these groups can be well-intentioned and simply disagree fundamentally on very core principles and ideas. That disagreement exists does not make one side more wicked than the other. Obstructing the majority’s agenda is not in and of itself wrong. For instance, Republicans actually did compromise on healthcare reform.  Quite a few of them backed the Wyden/Bennett bill which was a much better bill than the one the Senate eventually produced. Big Labor was the lurking opposition to that bill’s passage, and guess who happens to be situated deep in the pockets of Big Labor?

Hint: it’s not the Republicans.


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  1. collapse expand

    Let’s hope there’s some room for big tents in both parties so we can actually accomplish something in the Congress. As a Massachusetts resident, I’ll be watching Brown with interest.

  2. collapse expand

    amen. you said it.

    i wish more people respected the pragmatic mindset that underscores the conservative movement, tracing its roots back to Edmund Burke.

  3. collapse expand

    While I can respect your love for conservative tradition, and your faith that the Republican party might, eventually, return to it, I think you’re reading far too much into Brown’s victory.

    There’s no evidence that Brown represents the beginning of a sea change in the GOP’s approach to governing; in fact, the current fight in Florida between Rubio and Crist is a pretty strong indicator that there IS no sea change.

    A more conservative, orthodox Republican (at least, given the current state of the party) could not have won in Massachusetts, period. Brown was a rather shrewd, but desperate choice, and the party seems rather clear that he’s a single-use-only type of candidate.

    I mean, did you watch the Q&A session with the President and the Republicans today? The Republicans come across as uninformed, unconcerned with the vapidness of their questions and responses, and totally incoherent.

    I can understand your frustration, and your hope that the National GOP can pull out of this awful hole they’re in, but I just don’t see any evidence that they’re beginning to do that – nor do I see any evidence that they’re even inclined to do so.

  4. collapse expand

    E. D., I gather from your recent posts and complaints about snow that you’re living in and/or from Flagstaff. As a Tucsonan who assumes you’re following Arizona politics, I find your post interesting. While I’m sure that nobody outside the Grand Canyon State cares remotely about the impending GoP bloodbaths in both the Gubernatorial and Senate primaries, I’d really appreciate your take on both the McCain/Hayworth contest (I think McCain is dead, and I’m shocked that the Dems don’t seem to be planning an electable candidate to pick up those pieces) as well as the 4-way battle royal in the GoP Gubernatorial Primary. Down here in AZ-8, the four conservatives vying to challenge Giffords are tripping over each other as they move to the right. By all accounts, big-tent conservatism is most certainly dead here in Arizona.

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