Rushing Toward Irrelevance
Republicans openly shun new ideas
Once upon a time, conservatives liked to say that “ideas matter.” They attributed this pithy slogan to Ayn Rand, venerated author of Atlas Shrugged and The Virtue of Selfishness, and
tried to live by it, generating books, papers and legislative proposals
by the dozen. Although many of their theories later proved flimsy, they
at least attempted to address real problems with fresh thinking.
But ideas no longer matter—and in fact they’re dangerous, according to the maximum leader of the right.
At the Conservative Political Action
Conference in Washington
last week, Rush Limbaugh declared that new ideas ought to be shunned by
every right-thinking American. The radio kingpin savaged those in his
movement who have dared to suggest that the right needs policy
alternatives to compete with Democratic plans for economic revival,
universal health care, environmental stewardship and educational
improvement. Ranting on for more than an hour, he warned against any
reconsideration of the sacred platitudes of Reaganism.
“Everybody asks me … ‘Well, what
do we do, as conservatives? What do we do? How do we overcome this?’”
said Limbaugh, and, of course, he had a simple answer: “One thing we
can all do is stop assuming that the way to beat them is with better
policy ideas.” He went on to denounce the conservative “media and
policy types” in the “Beltway establishment” who have written on “the
concept that the era of Reagan is over.” That cued loud booing from the
audience, which turned into cheers as Limbaugh roared: “We have got to
stamp this out within this movement because it will tear us apart. It
will guarantee we lose elections.”
The
image of a radio demagogue, dressed entirely in black, roaring against
dissenters from the official line, provoked comparison with Fidel Castro
or Mao Zedong. Here was the harbinger of an ideology in decline,
exhibiting the pathological aversion to intellectual activity and
unfettered debate that is always the surest evidence of political
decay.
The irony, of course, is that Reaganism was, at its
zenith, a vehicle for policy ideas as well as a personality cult. What
began with the founding of National Review and the Barry
Goldwater campaign as a rump protest against stale Republican
moderation became the dominant current—with a vision of its own and a
series of policy schemes, from supply-side economics to workfare,
faith-based social spending, school vouchers and Social Security
privatization. But while the world has changed radically since those
ideas entered the political mainstream a quarter-century ago, Limbaugh
and his followers evidently feel that any attempt to cope with change
is heretical.
An Exhausted Ideology
Some Republicans clearly understand that their party and their ideology are exhausted, even if they still can’t come up with anything more creative than capital-gains tax cuts. (That means you, Newt Gingrich.) They also know that as a public spokesman and symbol, Limbaugh, whose utterances over the years have been larded with obnoxious racism and sexism, leaves much to be desired. Broadening the appeal of the G.O.P. and renewing the party platform is plainly essential after two elections that have shrunk its base and shriveled its message. Perhaps that is one reason why party leaders chose Michael Steele, an African American from Maryland, as the new chairman of the Republican National Committee. Even the clueless Limbaugh seems to realize that his movement has a problem, as he demonstrated when he vowed to convene a “female summit” to figure out why the great majority of women cannot stand him.
But Limbaugh and
his dittoheads— whose prejudices also find expression in the wisdom of
“Joe the Plumber” Wurzelbacher—maintain a stranglehold on the right.
When Steele dared to assert his leadership and sniped at Limbaugh’s
show as “incendiary” and “ugly,” he swiftly followed up with the same
kind of humiliating apology heard from other Republican critics of the
radio host. Having claimed to be the “de facto” head of the Republican
Party, Steele had to back down and heel to the strongman.
For
Democrats, these clown shows are amusing and encouraging. As long as
the Republicans kowtow to Limbaugh, they won’t be able to muster
substantive opposition to President Obama and the congressional
majority. That may be just as well for now. But every nation needs a
competitive marketplace of ideas—and conservatism today offers only
retreads.
C. 2008 Creators Syndicate Inc.
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