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This Is "Diminished Power"?
The Right talks.
By Peter Wehner
Posted: Wednesday, January 23, 2008
ARTICLE
National Review Online
Publication Date: January 23, 2008
The new conventional wisdom is that John McCain's victory in South Carolina last Saturday is proof that the "conservative establishment" in general, and Rush Limbaugh in particular, are not the political force they once were. In Sunday's Washington Post, for example, we read this: From Rush Limbaugh to Tom DeLay, voices that once held sway over the Republican rank and file unloaded on John McCain over the last week, trying to use a conservative electorate in South Carolina to derail the Arizona senator's quest for the Republican nomination. But though McCain failed to persuade many of the old Republican power brokers, he wrapped up the Republican establishment where it counted most, South Carolina… Limbaugh led the way with a verbal blitz, not just against McCain but against his closest rival in South Carolina, former Arkansas governor Mike Huckabee. "I'm here to tell you, if either of these two guys get the nomination, it's going to destroy the Republican Party. It's going to change it forever, be the end of it," Limbaugh fumed on his radio show Tuesday. It was a line of argument that he kept up all week long.
New York Times columnist David Brooks makes a similar case in his column on Tuesday. After mentioning Limbaugh, Brooks writes: Conservative voters have not followed their conservative leaders. Conservative voters are much more diverse than the image you'd get from conservative officialdom… While various conservative poobahs threaten to move to Idaho if Huckabee or McCain gets the nomination, the silent majority of conservative voters seem to like these candidates… The fact is, this has been a bad year for the conservative establishment… Regular Republican voters don't seem to mind independent thinking. There's room for moderates as well as orthodox conservatives. Limbaugh, Grover Norquist and James Dobson have influence, but they are not arbiters of conservative doctrine. I have several thoughts in response:
1. Former Arkansas governor Mike Huckabee, whom Brooks said created a "political earthquake" with his win in Iowa, seems to be sinking quickly, having never broken through and branched out his support beyond his evangelical base. In the aftermath of Huckabee's win in Iowa, Brooks wrote, "He took on Rush Limbaugh, the free market Club for Growth and even President Bush. The old guard threw everything they had at him, and their diminished power is now exposed." That pronouncement looks less accurate now than it did then -- and the demise of Huckabee can be attributed in part, I think, to the concerns raised about him by Limbaugh and others. The "political earthquake" Brooks thought he witnessed two weeks ago turns out, perhaps, to have been more like a political tremor.
2. It's not clear to me that grassroots conservatives are ignoring, at least in large numbers, the counsel of Limbaugh and other "conservative poobahs" when it comes to Senator McCain. Obviously some conservatives and Republicans are voting for him -- but certainly not in massive numbers. As the Washington Post wrote on Monday: McCain has yet to clearly win the Republican vote in any contest this year. In South Carolina… the senator's margin came from independents, who represented one-fifth of the vote. The same pattern occurred in New Hampshire, where McCain and Romney evenly split Republicans and McCain won by a big margin among independents. In Michigan, Romney decisively won Republicans on his way to victory there.
Michael Barone makes a similar point when he writes, "[McCain] hasn't been winning self-identified Republicans by any significant margin even where he has won, in New Hampshire and South Carolina. He has been running behind his 2000 percentages everywhere (though then he was in what was essentially a two-candidate race)."
3. One of the reasons Senator McCain is getting the support he is from conservatives is because no compelling conservative alternative has emerged. Why that has not occurred is a fascinating matter; but whatever the reasons are, no figure in the GOP race has excited or galvanized conservative leaders or the conservative movement. The result is that conservatives, uninspired by any of the choices, are split in their support -- with some (often unenthusiastically) lining up behind McCain. And to the extent that Senator McCain is securing the GOP vote, it's because he's emphasizing his conservative bona fides -- on national-security issues above all, where he has a compelling case to make. It's worth noting, too, that McCain has already reversed himself on taxes -- he is now portraying himself as a Kemp-like tax cutter, even though he opposed the Bush tax cuts earlier this decade -- and, at a minimum, has changed his emphasis on immigration, all in an effort to make himself more acceptable to conservatives. We'll see if it's enough.
4. Until this nomination and election plays itself out, it's difficult to draw any definitive conclusions about the state of the conservative movement. It is still a vital force in American politics -- but there is an understandable effort underway to take conservative principles, which are enduring, and apply them to issues and circumstances that are different than they were a quarter of a century ago. These two aspects of conservatism -- the part characterized by timelessness and a reliance on tradition and the part that is characterized by reform and adaptation -- are what people are in the midst of sorting out.
5. I think there is some amount of ignorance when it comes to people who don't often listen to Rush Limbaugh trying to explain him and his influence. For one thing, he doesn't view himself as the commanding general of a political army and his listeners as his troops. He has said, time and again, that his listeners are not "mind-numbed robots" who take order from him or anyone else. Limbaugh is above all a radio-talk-show host -- an immensely talented, humorous, and well-informed one, and among the most important voices in the history of radio. He is that before he is anything else -- and he has never fashioned himself as a political kingmaker or even the leader of a movement. Obviously he exerts great influence over conservatism and has influenced our understanding of it. Yet he calls things as he sees them, and sometimes his audience doesn't agree with him. He seems wholly untroubled by that. I recall that in 1992, many of his listeners were early and enthusiastic supporters of Ross Perot. Limbaugh knew all that -- and yet he criticized Perot anyway. It turned out he was right and his listeners were wrong about Perot -- but at the time, Limbaugh was said to be out of step with the views of his audience. Yet he continued to make his case -- and, eventually, he won over many of his early critics.
6. Having made the mistake of declaring the end of the Clinton Era prior to the New Hampshire primary -- perhaps I was the victim of my own wishful thinking -- I would caution others against dancing in the end-zone when it comes to declaring the diminishing influence of Limbaugh and the "conservative establishment." Rush in particular has maintained his talk-radio fastball for 20 years, and his run of success is akin to what Johnny Carson achieved on late-night television. Both men were phenomenally talented and endured through all sorts of different circumstances. They developed a bond with their audience which was deep and enduring and difficult for others to fully grasp. I suspect in the case of Limbaugh, that'll continue for some time to come. And by the way, if he's lost so much of his influence, why in the world does it seem like everyone is writing about Rush these days?
-- Peter Wehner, former deputy assistant to the president, is a senior fellow at the Ethics and Public Policy Center.
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The Quotable Cromartie
Recent clippings of VP and Senior Fellow. Michael Cromartie
On the new generation of evangelicals: "This new generation has the same convictions but without the edge. They may believe all the same things, but ... they've learned how to present themselves." (Washington Post, 3/6/04)
On politics and religion: Michael Cromartie, vice president of the Ethics and Public Policy Center, said that "too often, at least in religiously conservative communities ... there seems to be a concern that we must first of all get the whole culture converted to our theology before you can work for public good." Such a conversion is "not going to happen," he said, so that the question becomes: "How do you find a public grammar, a public language in order to work with people who actually agree with you on the policy but don't agree with you on the theology?" (Washington Post, 2/20/05)
On J. I. Packer's book Knowing God: "Conservative Methodists and Presbyterians and Baptists could all look at it and say, 'This sums it all up for us.'" (Time, 2/7/05)
Michael Cromartie: "The large evangelical populace in this country will cut President Bush a lot of slack. It's the self-appointed leaders in the evangelical movement who won't. I think most evangelicals are more tolerant, and understand political reality more, than the heads of organizations who try to speak for these groups." (The Bakersfield Californian, 11/12/2004)
On politics and religion: "Sure, you have a lot of progressive religious people and, politically, they are going to vote for Kerry. Your problem is that you have a small but significant cohort in the Democratic Party that is really anti-religious and doesn't want to bring religious values and norms into the public arena. That makes it difficult for people from a more moderate to conservative bent religiously to be around the party. They feel excluded and unwanted." (Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, 10/10/04)
On politics and religion: "Michael Cromartie, director of the evangelical studies project of the Washington-based Ethics and Public Policy Center, said the religious left is preaching to the liberal choir, not religious swing voters. 'They already have this [liberal] vote,' he said. 'This National Council of Churches crowd is not about to vote for Bush, anyway." (Washington Post, 9/4/04, p. B9)
On natural law: "Michael Cromartie, who directs projects involving evangelicals at the Ethics and Public Policy Center in Washington, invoked thinkers like John Calvin and concepts like 'common grace,' all with impeccable REformation credentials. 'A proper appropriation of the natural law tradition,' Mr. Cromartie wrote, 'can provide a public grammar for making appeals in the public arena to people who hold diverse philosophical worldviews and presuppositions." (New York Times, 8/21/04, p. A15)
Michael Cromartie: "The debate evangelicals are having among themselves today is not whether Christians should be concerned for justice, which we should, but what role and how large a role government should have in creating that justice. ... The debate we now need to have is whether certain policies have created more justice for the marginalized, or have they made matters worse? Many eminent social sicentists think the latter." (World, July 3/10, 2004)
Michael Cromartie: "People don't want a President to think that every important decision has a stamp of God's approval and that God is always on his side. ... [Americans] want their Presidents to be pious but not self-righteously so. So there's a paradox, isn't there? A President has to seem to be relying on God's wisdom but not acting like all his decisions are God's decisions." (Time, 6/21/04)
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What is an "Evangelical"?
A thoughtful look at a complicated notion
Mark Noll, professor at Wheaton College, delivered a lecture on "Understanding American Evangelicals" at EPPC's 2003 conference in Key West, Florida. He provides the history of evangelical movements, discusses the number of American evangelicals, and takes the measure of evangelical hymns. An elegant and eloquent presentation for those curious about what it means to be an evangelical.
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