The
Twilight of Conservatism
by
Christopher Manion
by Christopher Manion
As
the fading lights of conservative principle dwindle in America’s
dark political landscape, those who love life, liberty, and the
pursuit of happiness and the Creator from Whom they flow have ample
reason to be discouraged. But we must not lose heart.
Fifty
years ago, conservatism faced equally grim prospects. Its Republican
champions, Robert Taft and Tail Gunner Joe, were dead or discredited.
Its establishment alternative, President Dwight D. Eisenhower, appointed
Earl Warren and William Brennan to the Supreme Court. He then embraced
the growth of the welfare state in proportions that, for his day,
were gargantuan. Those were the dark days of 90% tax brackets, "duck
and cover," the rise of the United Nations, and the consolidation
of Communist rule over a large part of the world even as the liberal
establishment consolidated power over the Republican party.
Tough
times? Yes indeed. Yet, one conservative did not throw in the towel.
My father, Clarence Manion, known as the "Dean" because
of his leadership at Notre Dame Law School for thirty years, had
early on been one of Eisenhower’ s favorite Democrats. In the two
years before the 1952 elections, dad’s Key
To Peace had sold over a million copies; he had become a
national spokesman for Constitutional government. In 1953 Ike appointed
him to chair a commission designed to restore to the states the
powers that had been usurped during the FDR years (a talkative but
unhelpful junior member was Hubert Horatio Humphrey, a freshman
senator from Minnesota).
But
Ike soon soured on his conservative champion because Dean Manion
had become an advocate of the Bricker Amendment, a Constitutional
measure designed to prevent the now-familiar disintegration of American
sovereignty under the attack of international organizations and
treaties. Ike first tried to cajole dad: "Be neutral and I’ll
put you on the Supreme Court," Ike told the Dean.
No
dice. But why? Well, Dad used to tell his law students, "If
you take the first bribe, you may as well take the rest." So
Ike, who thought he had made an offer no one could refuse, figured
he had no choice. He fired dad in early 1954, the Bricker Amendment
failed, and the first "Republican" administration in twenty
years closed the door on conservatism.
There
the story might have ended, but for one man’s faith not in
government but in "the Laws of Nature and of Nature’s God."
Fifty years ago this summer, dad founded "The Manion Forum,"
a weekly conservative radio broadcast carried over hundreds of stations
throughout the country. His tenacious articulation of principle,
his defense of the Constitution, and his abiding faith enlightened
and enlivened American conservatives for twenty-five years
during which there was no talk radio, no Internet, and no cable
news. His was truly a voice in the wilderness.
1954
presented conservatives with a dark picture of freedom’s future,
but Dad was undaunted. In 1958, he endorsed Barry Goldwater, at
the time a relatively unknown Arizona Republican senator, for president.
In 1959, dad found Goldwater a collaborator, Brent Bozell (Bill
Buckley’s brother-in-law), coined a title, Conscience
of a Conservative, and founded a publishing company when
no one else would take the book.
The
result was the best-selling political manifesto in English of the
twentieth century. 500 pre-publication copies were sent to delegates
to the Republican state nominating conventions of several states
in early 1960, and the conservative movement of the second half
of the century was in full swing.
Ronald
Reagan was as close to a personification of that movement as anyone.
When
he became president, it was "morning in America." When
he was buried last month in California, twilight’s last gleaming
disappeared over the horizon.
Now
it is night-time in America as dark for conservatives as it was
in 1954. But with fidelity to principle, a tenacious defense of
our Constitution, and a reverence for the Laws of Nature and of
Nature’s God, today’s true conservatives will find an eager and
energetic generation ready to heed the call.
That
was the secret of conservative success of Clarence E. "Dean"
Manion, who died twenty-five years ago today, on July 28, 1979.
July
28, 2004
Christopher
Manion [send him mail] is
president of Manion Music,
LLC, which produces copyrighted, royalty-free music collections
for telecommunications media and commercial and hospitality sites
that use background music or music-on-hold. He writes from the Shenandoah
Valley.
Copyright
© Christopher Manion 2004. All Rights reserved.
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