August 14, 2007
Architectural Failure
By
Patrick J. Buchanan
If one had to sum up the legacy of
Karl Rove as political adviser to the 43rd
president, it could probably be done in four words:
tactical
brilliance, strategic
blindness.
Though George Bush was not given the
natural gifts of a
Ronald Reagan, his victories in Texas, followed by
successive victories in the presidential contests of
2000 and
2004, put him in the history books alongside Reagan,
who won California and the presidency twice.
None of Bush's wins were nearly so
impressive as the Reagan landslides in the Golden State
and the nation. But it is a testament to Rove that he
and Bush never lost a statewide or national election in
the four they contested from 1994 to 2004. Rove has two
Super Bowl rings. How many political advisers can say as
much?
But if Rove's contribution to the career
of George Bush will put him in the Hall of Fame, the
Bush-Rove legacy for their party is worse than mixed.
Rove wanted to be the architect of a new Republican
majority. Instead, he and Bush presided over the loss of
the Reagan Democrats and both houses of Congress.
The house Nixon and Reagan built, Bush
and Rove tore down, leaving rubble in its place. Rove's
failure was a failure of vision. He and Bush believed
the future of the party lay in adding to the Republican
base the
Hispanic vote, now the nation's largest minority,
approaching 15 percent of the population.
They went about it the wrong way.
Pandering to that voting bloc, Bush
stopped enforcing the immigration laws and offered
amnesty to 12 million to 20 million illegal aliens and
the businesses that hired them. Bush and Rove were going
to lure the Hispanic vote away from the Democratic Party
by putting illegals on a path to citizenship.
But as we saw in June, when the nation
rose up in rage against the
Bush amnesty, the pair did indeed unite the
GOP—against themselves, and they severed themselves from
the
Reagan Democrats and the country.
It was cynical politics, and it
backfired, crippling the presidential candidacy of John
McCain in the process.
But even before the disastrous
immigration reform bill, Bush had become a zealot of
NAFTA, GATT and most-favored-nation status for China.
These have left his country with the worst trade
deficits in history, put the United States $2 trillion
in debt to Beijing and Tokyo, cost Middle America 3
million
manufacturing jobs and arrested the income rise of
the middle class, as our capitalist pigs and hedge-fund
hogs have happily gorged themselves at the capital gains
tax trough.
Bush's original idea of
"compassionate conservatism" was a fine one. But
under him and Rove, compassionate conservative turned
out to be code for a cocktail of
Great Society Liberalism and Big Government
Conservatism. How could professed admirers of Ronald
Reagan think that by doubling the budget of
the Department of Education the tests scores of
school kids would
inexorably rise?
Even earlier in the Bush years, the
president, after the
trauma of 9-11, had a Damascene conversion to
neoconservatism, a neo-Wilsonian ideology and secular
religion. Among its tenets: that we are a providential
nation whose mission on earth is to liberate mankind and
democratize the planet; that we are in a world-historic
struggle between good and evil; that our triumph is to
be accomplished by the robust use of American military
power—beginning with the benighted nations of the
Islamic Middle East that represent an existential threat
to America, democracy and Israel.
Sometime between Sept. 11 and his
axis-of-evil address, Bush sat down and ate of the
forbidden fruit of messianic globaloney. Consuming it,
he got up and committed the greatest strategic blunder
in American history by ordering the invasion of a
country that had not attacked us, did not threaten us
and did not want war with us.
The Bush-Rove rationale: For our
survival, we had to disarm Iraq of weapons of mass
destruction that we now know it did not have.
The great political architects of the
20th century are FDR and Richard Nixon. After the three
Republican landslides of the 1920s, FDR put together a
New Deal coalition that controlled the White House for
36 years, with the exception of two terms for
Gen. Eisenhower.
After the rout of the Republicans in
1964,
Nixon pulled together a New Majority that held the
White House for 20 of 24 years, racking up two 49-state
landslides for Nixon and Reagan, even as FDR had won 46
states in 1936. In his re-election bid, Bush won 31
states.
In seeking a new GOP majority, Bush and
Rove rejected the Nixon-Reagan model. Instead, they
embraced the interventionism of Wilson, the free-trade
globalism of FDR, the
open-borders immigration ideas of
LBJ and the budget priorities of the Great Society.
It was a bridge too far for the party base.
Now, Rove walks away like some subprime
borrower abandoning the house on which he can no longer
make the payments. The Republican Party needs a new
architect. The firm of Bush & Rove was not up to the
job.
Patrick J. Buchanan needs
no introduction to VDARE.COM
readers; his book
State of Emergency: The Third World Invasion and
Conquest of America,
can be ordered from
Amazon.com.