June 03, 2004
Will Conservatives Learn From Their Bush Blunder?
By Sam Francis
Is the American conservative
movement as totally bankrupt as it appears to be?
For the
last four years, conservatives have whimpered and
whined about the insufficient conservative principles of
George W. Bush, and properly so.
What they don't want to remember,
of course, is that
they're the ones who picked Mr. Bush in the first
place—and at the expense of alternatives who tried to
tell them he was no conservative.
Even liberals are noticing that the
American right, or what remains of it,
isn't happy with the White House incumbent. In the
Washington Post last week, liberal columnist E.J.
Dionne expounded on the "conservative crack-up"
[VDARE.com
note: Relax!
Jonah Goldberg is
unworried]
and mentioned several of the problems conservatives
are having with the president.
As usually happens when the
left pontificates about the right, Mr. Dionne got a
lot of it wrong, but he does have a point. [Iraq
and the Conservative Crackup By E. J. Dionne
Jr., June 1, 2004]
That point is that "solidarity—a
characteristic of the conservative movement for the past
three decades except for interludes under Richard Nixon
and the first George Bush—is fraying. Lacking unity,
conservatism is expressing its variety."
Conservatives themselves know the
"solidarity" Mr. Dionne is talking about was
never all that solid, but Mr. Dionne is correct that
many conservatives are now leaving the ship or muttering
about it, and frankly it's about time.
The
Iraq boondoggle fulfills all that anti-war
conservatives warned against; the
president's amnesty for illegal aliens is a
disaster, as are the vast increase of government power
in the
Patriot Act, the swelling of the
federal budget, and the president's lackluster
embrace of social issues like the
pro-life and
anti-homosexual marriage causes.
The fraying Mr. Dionne has noticed
became newsworthy last month when conservative columnist
Robert Novak covered a recent dinner of the
American Conservative Union at which President Bush
was the speaker.
Mr. Novak reported that
conservative movement leader (and ACU vice chairman)
Don Devine "stayed seated … when everybody else
was standing and clapping." [Bush's
Shaky Base]
Mr. Devine stayed in his seat as a
deliberate protest of Mr. Bush's defections from the
true faith of conservatism.
When a lifelong pillar of
conservative Republicanism like Don Devine is
disenchanted, Mr. Novak wrote, "it signifies that the
president's record does not please all conservatives."
Well, if Mr. Devine wasn't too
happy with Mr. Bush, his fellow pillars at the ACU were
none too happy with Mr. Devine. Principle is all well
and good, you see, but having the president speak to the
ACU dinner was a real feather in the conservative
bonnet. It makes the ACU look like it's really
important, and when the head of the ACU realized what
Mr. Devine had done and had even talked to Mr. Novak
about it, he told him to hoof it.
Mr. Bush delivered a wonderful
speech, ACU chairman
David Keene wrote in a
public letter to Mr. Devine, and "you have done
incalculable damage to ACU and I hope you will have the
good grace to resign your position as Vice-Chairman. If
you don't, I can assure you that I will ask the Board to
consider removing you at our June meeting."
And on top of that, Mr. Keene says
he and Mr. Devine are no longer friends at all.
Well, maybe they'll make up
eventually, and Mr. Devine forthwith sniveled his
own apology to the president.
In the meantime, why is any of this
important? There are two reasons.
The first is that, as Mr. Novak
argued, if
conservatives are not happy with President Bush,
they may not
turn out for him quite as much as he needs to stay
in the White House, and he needs
every vote he can muster to do that.
So the disenchantment of even a
small fringe of activists like Mr. Devine may be enough
to sink the Bush presidency.
The second reason is that
conservatives like Mr. Devine and his friends (and
ex-friends) in the
conservative movement, instead of apologizing,
really ought to learn something from their blunders with
Mr. Bush.
In 2000 they were all so desperate
to dump the Democrats that they
ignored, if they didn't actually denounce and
undermine, any and every alternative on the right—mainly
Pat Buchanan, but several other conservative
candidates for the
GOP nomination, and
Howard Philips of the Constitution Party also.
The conservatives wanted to elect a
Republican, and they didn't much care who it was or what
he believed.
Now they're all upset and the
"solidarity" of their movement is "fraying"—precisely
because the Republican they insisted on supporting was
never a
conservative at all and such pillars of iron as Don
Devine have nowhere else to go.
Is there any reason to think they
are not so bankrupt today that they can learn what needs
to be learned from this experience?
COPYRIGHT
CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.
[Sam Francis [email
him] is a nationally syndicated columnist. A selection
of his columns,
America Extinguished: Mass Immigration And The
Disintegration Of American Culture, is now available
from
Americans For Immigration Control.
Click here
for Sam Francis' website. Click
here to orderhis monograph,
Ethnopolitics: Immigration, Race, and the American
Political Future and
here for
Glynn Custred's review.]