Before
the Storm
by
Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
by Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
From
the July 2001 issue of
The American Enterprise
Before
the Storm: Barry Goldwater and the Unmaking of the American Consensus
By Rick Perlstein, Hill and Wang, 671 pages, $30
"America
would remember the sixties as a decade of the Left," writes Rick
Perlstein, in his fascinating and revisionist account of how the
1964 presidential campaign marked a new course of American political
life. Really it was the "decade when the polarization began."
The
polarization concerned the role of government. In his 1964 campaign
against Barry Goldwater, Lyndon Baines Johnson articulated the postwar
liberal consensus: "Government is not an enemy of the people. It
is the people." Goldwater championed individual rights and liberties,
and called the government "a Leviathan, a vast national authority
out of touch with the people, and out of control." LBJ won the election
by a huge margin, but over the long run, according to Perlstein,
Goldwater's vision has triumphed.
Among
the book's major contributions is tracing the origin of the Goldwater
movement to Clarence Manion, former dean of the Notre Dame Law School.
Manion, a man of the anti-Roosevelt Old Right, was displeased to
see Eisenhower carrying on the New Deal rather than repudiating
it. This inspired much work, including his effort to draft Barry
Goldwater for president.
The
man and the movement needed a manifesto, and it was Manion who set
out to create one. He decided on William Buckley's brother-in-law,
Brent Bozell, as ghostwriter, and in six weeks, Bozell finished
Conscience of a Conservative. Rather than deal with a left-wing
New York publisher, Manion contracted directly with a printer. The
book debuted at number 14 on the New York Times bestseller
list, and by November 1960, had sold 500,000 copies.
"I
have little interest in streamlining government or making it more
efficient for I mean to reduce its size," the book proclaimed. "I
do not undertake to promote welfare for I propose to extend freedom.
My aim is not to pass laws, but to repeal them."
Yet
Goldwater also proposed to expand the state. His book urged the
U.S. government to summon the will and the means to take the initiative
against the Russians. Later, in the sort of rhetoric that would
lead to his defeat, he was to advocate atom-bombing North Vietnam a
far cry from the limited government theory that had set his movement
in motion.
Besides
giving Manion his rightful place, the book also credits William
J. Baroody, Sr. of the American Enterprise Institute with being
the chief intellectual entrepreneur of the Goldwater campaign. Discussing
the increasing influence of AEI, Perlstein says that "ideas once
enforced at union-busting manufacturies by goonsquad and court injunction
now received scientific demonstration by economists with Austrian
names."
More
surprising is the role that William Buckley played. Buckley had
been skeptical about Goldwater since 1959, and had even pooh-poohed
the idea of Conscience of a Conservative. He early on said, "I don't
want to be identified with a total political failure," and wrote
a series of hostile newspaper columns. Late in the campaign, Buckley
told Richard Clurman, chief correspondent of Time, that if Goldwater
were elected, "That might be a serious problem." Later, speaking
to a shocked and silent Young Americans for Freedom convention,
he dismissed the campaign: "We do not believe in the Platonic affirmation
of our own little purities."
But
the campaign was most hobbled by Goldwater's support of war, precisely
the part of his platform Buckley most approved of. He promised to
end the draft as soon as possible, but it was not enough. The famous
daisy/atom bomb TV commercial wounded Goldwater, and Americans came
to fear he would start a nuclear conflict. So, on election day,
the (apparent) peace candidate won.
The
entire drama the draft movement, the nomination struggle, Nelson
Rockefeller, the hopelessly biased media is chronicled in these
pages. The smears are especially bracing to recount. We are reminded
of Walter Cronkite's and Daniel Schorr's on-air claim that Goldwater
was going to Hitler's former vacation home in Bavaria to meet neo-Nazis.
Norman Mailer, covering the convention for Esquire, said the resounding
cheers reminded him of Sieg Heils. Pornographer Ralph Ginzberg set
up Fact magazine to recruit psychiatrists who would call Goldwater
crazy. A Methodist magazine referred to its issue on Goldwaterism
as a "continuation of its response to the threat of Hitler."
Though
"our own little purities" only won 27 million votes, Americans did
not forget the call for freedom from federal power. And many of
the astounding 3.9 million Goldwater volunteers remained active
in politics. Indeed, with the end of the Cold War making possible
the end of warfare ideology on the right, the domestic heart of
Goldwaterism is making progress once again.
These
days, hardly anyone outside academia believes that the more that
government manages social and economic life, the better off we will
be. To a great extent, we are still in the midst of the anti-New
Deal revolution, and far closer today to seeing its potential fulfilled
than we were in 1964.
Llewellyn
H. Rockwell, Jr. [send him
mail] is president of the Ludwig
von Mises Institute in Auburn, Alabama, editor of LewRockwell.com
and author of Speaking
of Liberty.
Copyright
© 2001 The American Enterprise
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