November 01, 2008 Pat Buchanan At 70: “He Told You So, You F****ing Fools!”By Tom Piatak Kingsley Amis
famously suggested that
Robert
Conquest should call a revised edition of his pathbreaking account of Stalin’s purges, The Great Terror A similar sentiment is appropriate to any consideration of Pat Buchanan’s career on this November 2, his seventieth birthday. Buchanan has been right on all the
major issues facing I was lucky enough to get to know
Buchanan by becoming involved in his
political campaigns. I was privileged to head his
campaigns in The most memorable of these was probably the dinner a dozen of us attended in Manchester on the Saturday before Buchanan’s victory in the 1996 New Hampshire primary—the day before he gave his great "Peasants with Pitchforks" speech. Buchanan could sense he was going to win. His joie de vivre filled the room. With Buchanan, though, there was no
guarantee of haute
cuisine. On one campaign swing through Indeed, I was always struck by the way he listened attentively to whoever he was talking to at any campaign event. He took a clear interest in touring factories and learning firsthand from those who worked there about how they did their jobs. Of course, humor was sometimes needed to deal with some of the eccentrics drawn to any insurgent campaign. Once, Pat promised a questioner concerned about "black helicopters" that he would shoot them down. Whenever anything called to mind
the memories of his youth, Buchanan’s joy was obvious.
The Sunday before the 1996 Iowa caucuses, Buchanan sat
in the front pew at a big Catholic church in Des Moines,
silent through the
modern hymns but showing surprised delight when the
final hymn was announced, and then singing
"Holy God, We Praise Thy Name" with gusto. As
the congregation joined Pat in belting out that great
Catholic hymn, I knew that Buchanan was going to do
well in It is a profound tragedy for Both Bush and McCain swallowed the
neoconservative line whole. Both see the mission of the
United States as using its blood and treasure to spread
""global
democratic capitalism." Both welcome the mass
immigration that is radically transforming the United
States. Both advocate
subordinating American economic interests to those
of the "global
economy." In short, neither views Buchanan long ago warned that allowing neoconservatives to set the agenda would be calamitous for conservatives. His warning was unmistakably vindicated when the Republicans lost Congress in 2006. And if the American electorate rejects Bush and McCain next Tuesday, it will be rejecting neoconservatism, pure and simple. Of course, Buchanan opposed the
Iraq War that has cast its shadow over Bush’s
presidency. He
foresaw that removing Saddam Hussein would greatly
strengthen More generally, Buchanan recognized
that the end of the Cold War meant that Buchanan anticipated another reason Bush is so unpopular, and McCain’s campaign is foundering: the perception that the GOP is far more interested in the welfare of Wall Street than in the fate of the American middle class—a perception that grew only more acute as McCain flew back to Washington to support the massive bailout package engineered by Goldman Sachs alumnus Henry Paulson. Even such a vehement Buchanan-hater as David Frum now largely agrees with Buchanan about the economic problems facing the American middle class, He noted in an article earlier this year that "Conservatives need to stop denying reality. The stagnation of the incomes of middle class Americans is a fact." [The Vanishing Republican Voter, New York Times, September 5, 2008] Frum wrote that among the reasons for this, and the concomitant growth of economic inequality in America, are "a great shift from a national to a planetary division of labor," under which "Less-skilled Americans now face hundreds of millions of wage competitors," and the "abundant low-skilled immigration [that] hurts lower America by reducing wages." But Buchanan recognized stagnant incomes and growing inequality as a problem beginning with his 1992 campaign for president. He described for the Republican delegates in Houston the people he had met campaigning who were hurt by that recession: "They are our people. And we need to reconnect with them. We need to let them know we know they're hurting. They don't expect miracles, but they need to know we care." Opening his 1996 campaign, Buchanan stated:
"Our American workers are the most productive in the world; our
technology is the finest. Yet, the real incomes of
American workers have fallen 20 percent in 20 years. Why
are our people not realizing the fruits of their labor?
I will tell you. Because we have a government that is
frozen in the ice of its own indifference, a government
that does not listen anymore to the forgotten men and
women who work in the forges and factories and plants
and businesses of this country." And again and again in his campaigns, Buchanan pointed to the same factors keeping incomes stagnant that Frum recognized in 2008—mass immigration and global free trade. The sooner the rest of the GOP catches up to Buchanan, the better off it will be. As Paul Craig Roberts has shown, the only job growth occurring in America is in areas of the economy not subject to foreign competition, and what is justified today as "free trade" is really a form of labor arbitrage involving the replacement of Americans by foreigners whose only advantage is their willingness to work cheap. Buchanan’s protectionism was widely denounced by "mainstream" conservatives during his runs for the presidency. But we can now see that these critics—almost all of whom lined up behind the trillion dollar Bush-Paulson Wall Street bailout, with NR editor Rich Lowry even chiding House Republicans who voted against it for being "irresponsible"—are the type who strain at gnats and swallow camels. Rather than propose a panoply of new government programs to ameliorate economic inequality and income stagnation, Buchanan sought to go to the heart of the problem by removing two of its major causes: the cheap immigrant labor pouring into the country and the cheap foreign labor doing abroad the jobs Americans used to do here. Buchanan’s protectionism was grounded in patriotism and the economic philosophy of Washington, Hamilton, Lincoln, and Coolidge, not in the crony capitalism that has come to characterize the GOP of George W. Bush—much less the corruption that sees so many former politicians and bureaucrats retire to lucrative work for foreign interests. Buchanan also argued for a fence
along the
US-Mexican border to stop the ongoing invasion of And for the
survival of the American nation, let alone
conservative politics in Of course, Buchanan’s contributions
to American political thought are not limited to his
political campaigns. He remains one of the most astute
of columnists and commentators. The books he has
authored, including The Great Betrayal, But Buchanan’s greatest strength is his loyalty to the beliefs that formed him, and his courage in defending them. What Buchanan did in his campaigns, by defending traditional morality and beliefs and arguing against mass immigration and globalism, was to take on both wings of America’s elite at the same time—the left-wing elite that gives lip service to displaced manufacturing workers but is really animated by its hatred for traditional morality and its desire to advance social radicalism; the right-wing elite that gives lip service to defending traditional morality but is really animated by its desire to advance the interests of transnational corporations and enrich its members. Unlike Buchanan, both wings of our elite do not care about ordinary Americans, much less about the traditional morality that they either openly or covertly despise. Given the forces arrayed against him, it is not surprising that Buchanan failed to win the White House. But I am proud that I voted for Buchanan each time he ran. In the
words of the
old Southern song:
"I’d climb my
horse and follow
Marse to hell come any day." Tom Piatak (email him) writes from Cleveland, Ohio. |