Those who have never met a Republican candidate they couldn’t
support respond to my insults against the party of used-car dealers,
coddling public administrators, by insisting, "We have no
choice." Presumably Republicans mean it when they say they’re
against big government, the same way neoconservatives do when
they call for a more efficient democratic welfare state. The trouble,
I am told, is not Republicans or neocons but the "culture,"
the popular addiction to entitlements, Hollywood film-writers,
and NBC News, all of which are the real culprits in our lunge
toward the left. And if we don’t stop being ideologues, as explained
by the Beltway Boys on FOX last Saturday, and nominate a "Republican
moderate" for president, we might land up two years hence
with Hillary Clinton in the White House. We were supposedly lucky
the last time around to get such a sterling conservative president;
nonetheless, according a FOX poll, the Republicans who now seem
most likely to beat Hillary are the "moderates," Giuliani,
McCain, and of course (FOX’s fav) Condoleezza Rice. The Republicans
therefore have no choice but to practice damage control, while
equivocating on racial preferences and immigration reform, and
expanding social programs at least as eagerly as the other side.
Admittedly Republicans don’t look particularly bold when they
act in this way, but by being in national politics and by occasionally
throwing a bone to the Religious Right, they can keep the Dems
off our backs.
There is of course not the slightest trace of truth in any of
this, and it might be an interesting but futile exercise to point
out why. If the federal government has grown in its scope and
intrusiveness at least as much under Republican presidential administrations
as it has under the Democrats, a point exhaustively documented
by Robert Higgs, Tom Woods and Tom DiLorenzo, why depict Republicans
as a restraining force? Republicans combine the bad habits of
their putative opposition with inexcusable mendacity. There is
familiar defense of such dubious behavior that should be stated
not because it is true but because it is widely believed, namely
that the "democratic center right" is reacting to a
political culture that it did not create and can influence only
minimally. But one has to look beyond this excuse. The center-right
has gradually embraced most of the Left’s historical positions
but has merely restated them with apparent moderation, for example,
by rallying to the original, less radicalized form of feminism,
by advocating an extensive welfare state with lower marginal tax
rates, and by praising Martin Luther King while lying about his
endorsement of racial quotas. Those who talk like this are not
Taft Republicans but often advocates of what the American Right
once opposed. And by now they are the preferred advisors of the
Republican Party, in a match made between opportunists and mislabeled
leftists.
Equally important, if the "conservative movement"
were as concerned about small-government as it is about waging
global democratic wars, it might be influencing public opinion
accordingly. Movement conservative leaders and the Republican
Party have opted for big government and leftist missionary wars
but not because of public demand. Rather they have worked long
and hard to manufacture a demand for their interests.
The
center right’s willingness to accommodate the Left and even occasionally
to go beyond it in exhibiting "outreach," has probably
affected our political culture as much as anything the official
Left has done. The Republicans and their neocon visionaries have
influenced the American future but not in ways that classical
liberals or traditionalists might approve of. They have chosen
the public issues they like, while rejecting others that might
resonate with readers of this website. Republicans do not invest
energy in certain causes because they do not believe they would
profit from them or because they turn off their neocon handlers,
e.g., repealing the Americans with Disability Act, Title Nine
of Jimmy Carter’s extension of the Civil Rights Act, or the No
Child Left Behind Act. Neither Bush nor his neoconservative-cheering
gallery is shielding us from any Zeitgeist. They go into high
gear for things that they want, whether or not the public is behind
it. Their propagandists only start yammering about how the Left
has put Republican politicians in a bind, if it’s not what the
RNC or Karl Rove feels any pressure or inspiration to do. And
Republicans don’t shun costly federal social programs, as noted
in The New Republic by Noam Scheiber (October 10, 2005),
if it means getting a leg up on the opposition. Thus they promise
the sun and the moon to retirees, a group they can woo without
seeming to be politically incorrect. Here Republicans have shamelessly
used tax dollars from younger, hardworking citizens to feather
their nest. If Hans-Hermann Hoppe considers democracy the "god
that has failed," then the Republican Party is the guardrail
that continues to collapse.
February
17, 2006