February 08, 2008
A McCain Rapprochement With the Right?
By
Patrick J. Buchanan
On Thursday, at the
Conservative Political Action Conference in
Washington, Sen. John McCain stood before thousands of
conservatives he has done his level best to anger and
alienate for a decade—to
ask for their support.
And he made a not unconvincing case.
What he said essentially was this. We
have
fought each other in the past, and we have fought
side by side. And I admit to having made my share of
mistakes. But if we do not work together, we lose the
presidency. And if we lose the presidency, your causes
will be lost, as well as my last chance to be president.
But if you will work with me, many of
the causes for which you have fought—one more justice
like Roberts and Alito, retention of the Bush tax cuts,
further reductions in tax rates, a more secure
border—will be taken up as the causes of my presidency.
Moreover, my door will be open and your
voices heard. And none of this will happen if
Hillary or
Barack Obama wins, which will happen if we do not
join forces and fight together.
Bottom line: If we don't hang together,
we all hang separately. If my end of the dinghy sinks,
yours will not stay afloat. And if I lose, you get your
pound of flesh, but we will both be out in the cold as a
Democratic Congress and president undo what was right
about the Bush presidency as well as what was wrong
about the Bush presidency.
So it is your call.
McCain is no orator. But the speech had
humility and humor—and put the ball back squarely in the
court of the conservatives. For John McCain had just
taken the first step toward a rapprochement with the
right, by asking for an armistice and offering an
alliance.
In 1964, as an even more acrimonious
battle for the GOP ended at the Cow Palace in San
Francisco, where the right hooted and booed Nelson
Rockefeller, another Arizonan was far less compromising
than John McCain.
Barry Goldwater told that convention of
conservatives that had just nominated him:
"Anyone who joins us in all sincerity, we welcome.
Those who do not care for our cause, we don't expect to
enter our ranks in any case."
Conservatives now have a decision to
make, though months before they have to make it. That
decision: Is it better to cede the White House to the
Democrats than have McCain become president of the
United States and leader of the Republican Party and the
nation?
Many have already made that decision:
Better, they
argue, to lose
to Hillary than win with McCain. Better to be
principled than pragmatic. As John F. Kennedy once said,
"Sometimes party loyalty asks too much."
If the issue were simply, "Does
McCain deserve the support of conservatives?" the
answer would be simple and emphatic:
No. Indeed, John McCain has fully earned the
repudiation he received in the Arizona primary, when
Mitt Romney ran far ahead among conservatives.
However, there is a question other than
whether McCain deserves the support of the right, and it
is this: Would it better serve the causes in which
conservatives believe to have McCain in the White House
or to have Clinton there?
If Hillary or Obama wins, as Jimmy
Carter beat
Gerald Ford in 1976, there is, argue some
conservatives, a chance for a restoration in 2012, just
as happened in 1980 when
Reagan ousted
Carter, sweeping 44 states and bringing in the first
Republican Senate in a quarter century. And we got the
Reagan Decade.
But if Hillary or Obama wins, the
likelihood is good that either would nominate the next
two justices to the Supreme Court. And there is no doubt
that any Clinton or Obama nominee will be in the mold of
Ruth Bader Ginsburg, not
Antonin Scalia, and the long battle for the Supreme
Court will be lost irretrievably.
The most powerful case against McCain is
that, put brutally, he is not to be trusted.
Many on the right believe that if he
wins, he will have no further need of conservatives and
will revert to the McCain of
McCain-Feingold,
McCain-Kennedy and
McCain-Lieberman, the John McCain of the
Gang of 14, who will never nominate justices like
Sam Alito, because that would
alienate his true constituency, the
media, who are at his feet every time he undermines
the conservative cause.
There is another consideration. McCain
has said he will stay in Iraq another 100 years if
necessary, that Russia should be thrown out of the G-8,
that he will do whatever it takes to halt Iran's nuclear
enrichment program. He has told us: "There's going to
be other wars. ... I'm sorry to tell you, there's going
to be other wars. We will never surrender, but there
will be other wars."
John McCain seeks to be a
war president. Indeed, it is the
role of commander in chief of a nation at war that
seems to
commend itself most to John McCain. But is that good
for America, let alone the right?
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.