January 17, 2008
Three-Way GOP Race—Chaos or Creative Destruction?
By
Patrick J. Buchanan
With
Mike Huckabee winning Iowa, John McCain winning New
Hampshire and Mitt Romney winning Michigan, all in 12
days, pundits are saying the GOP is in chaos. That
prognosis is premature.
Undoubtedly, with the nation in the
fifth year of an unpopular war and the economy tanking
along with President Bush's poll numbers, GOP prospects
for holding the White House are poor.
But what is taking place in the
Republican primaries is healthy. A new party is taking
shape, or rather being hammered into shape. GOP leaders
are being introduced, sometimes rudely, to the reality
that the national party has lost touch both with the
country and its own base. And the would-be future
leaders are either listening, or they are losing.
Refusing to hide his Christian beliefs,
Mike Huckabee put them on public display in Iowa. After
a second-place finish in the August straw poll, thanks
to evangelical support, he rose steadily until he routed
all four front-runners to win the caucuses on Jan. 3.
Fred Thompson, a state's rights man on right-to-life,
and Rudy, who is pro-choice, are almost out of the
running. Traditional values are still a trump card in
the GOP
Before the race began, Giuliani was a
sanctuary city mayor, McCain an amnesty man and Huckabee
favored letting illegal aliens compete for state
scholarships. Now, after being battered at a thousand
town meetings and on a thousand talk shows, all of them
sound like Tom Tancredo.
A year ago, the GOP was a free-trade
NAFTA-GATT party, no one more so than McCain. After his
New Hampshire win, straight-talking John went to
depressed Michigan and told Michiganders their jobs in
the auto industry were not coming back. And Michigan
Republicans told straight-talking John to get lost and
not come back.
In the early debates, Ron Paul was
booed for calling the Iraq war a blunder and saying
the
terrorists of 9-11 were over here because we were
over there. Rudy got a roaring ovation for denouncing
him. The Michigan GOP chairman demanded that Paul be
excluded from all future debates. But whenever Fox News
ran a post-debate poll, Paul came out on top. And in
Michigan, he paid back the GOP chair by thumping Fred
Thompson and
America's mayor.
What is taking place inside the GOP is
not decay, but creative destruction.
As in the Goldwater era, voices are
being raised to tell an arrogant (Huckabee had the right
word) establishment its policies are no longer producing
and that if the party does not reconnect with the
country, it is headed for the dumpster.
After his defeat in 1960, Richard Nixon,
observing Barry Goldwater's rise and the energy his
campaign generated, realized the center of gravity in
the party had shifted away from the establishment he had
courted with his
Pact of Fifth Avenue with Nelson Rockefeller. The
center of gravity had moved South and West, and sharply
to the right.
No ideologue, Nixon moved with it.
To win the 1968 nomination, he ignored
the establishment and courted
Goldwater,
Strom Thurmond and the conservatives. After his
victory in 1968, Nixon created a new center-right
coalition that would win four of the next five
presidential elections, two with 49-state, 60 percent
landslides.
It is not
Reaganism that is being repudiated in the GOP
primaries, it is Bushism and its fruits: an
unpopular war, a
deindustrialized nation, a
Third World invasion. Ronald Reagan's principles and
philosophy remain the bedrock upon which any
conservative and Republican majority must be built. But
the policies of that era, on immigration, trade and
jobs, must change. And as the
Soviet Empire and the
Soviet Union are history, U.S. strategic interests
are no longer at risk in every quarrel or on every
continent, as in the 1980s. As our situation is new,
said Abraham Lincoln, let us think and act anew.
Nor was Reagan an inflexible ideologue.
Though a free-trader, he did not hesitate to put
free-trade absolutism on the shelf if national interests
commanded it. Thus he imposed quotas to halt the dumping
of steel, autos, computer chips and motorbikes into the
United States. Saving Harley-Davidson meant more to the
Gipper than fealty to
Manchester School economists, none of whom had ever
built or run a great nation.
For Republicans, issues that yet unite
the coalition and remain majority views nationally are
family values, low taxes, conservative judges and
Second Amendment rights.
But to win the election, the GOP has to
be competitive in Ohio, Michigan, Pennsylvania. It will
thus have to come up with credible ideas not only to
secure the border and roll back the invasion from the
Third World, but to stop the hemorrhaging of
manufacturing jobs and reindustrialize the country, and
to extricate us from Iraq, as Ike got us out of Korea
and Nixon pledged to end the
war in Vietnam.
What the voters are saying to both
parties is that yesterday's men and yesterday's ideas
will no longer do.
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. His new book
is
Day of Reckoning: How
Hubris, Ideology, and Greed Are Tearing America Apart.