The pursuit of unhappiness.
Meyerson, Adam
Rip Van Winkle arose this spring from a slumber of two decades. He
gazed in amazement at a world transformed.
The Soviet empire, so menacing when he fell asleep in 1977, was now
on the ash heap of history.
Rising protectionism had given way to exploding commerce and tumbling
trade barriers.
Nixon-Carter stagflation had been replaced by Reagan-Gingrich
prosperity.
Business and profits were no longer dirty words. Now everyone wanted
to be an entrepreneur.
Prices for gasoline, airfare, and long-distance phone service had
plummeted thanks to competition and deregulation.
California had passed an initiative abolishing racial preferences.
Federal farm and welfare programs dating to the New Deal had been
abolished.
Welfare caseloads in Wisconsin had fallen in half.
A new emphasis on local accountability, truth-in-sentencing, and
community policing was reducing crime in New York and other major
cities.
Congress was debating fundamental Medicare reform that would lower
costs and give the elderly more choices.
Leading liberals were pushing for legislation criminalizing late-term
abor- tions.
Congressional Black Caucus leaders were breaking with the teachers
unions and the NAACP by endorsing school vouchers.
Conservative Republicans now controlled both houses of Congress and a
robust majority of governorships.
Rip Van Winkle had fallen asleep listening to a harangue by Ralph
Nader. He awakened to the music of Rush Limbaugh.
But one thing hadn't changed since Rip closed his eyes.
Conservatives were still depressed. They were still complaining about
their leaders. And they were still failing to build institutions as
powerful as their ideas.
The American conservative is seemingly dedicated to three principles:
life, liberty, and the pursuit of unhappiness. Something there is about
the con- servative temperament that loves despair.
Conservatives have been singing the blues for most of the 20 years
this magazine has been published. This is not simply nostalgic yearning
for a leader like Ronald Reagan. Conservatives were unhappy during most
of his administration, too.
In October 1983, Policy Review interviewed 12 conservative leaders to
ask them what they thought of Ronald Reagan. Nine gave him low ratings.
"If Reagan represents no more than a right-of-center vision of
the welfare state, he doesn't represent change; he simply
represents cheap government. Republicans cannot win in that
framework," said a GOP backbencher now in the congressional
leadership.
"The radical surgery that was required in Washington was not
performed. Ronald Reagan made a pledge not to touch entitlement
programs, and that's one of the few pledges he has kept
absolutely," said a top conservative activist.
"This has been essentially another Ford administration. It has
been business as usual, not much different from any other Republican
administration in our lifetime," said a leading conservative
intellectual and journalist.
These quotations, from brilliant people I admire, betray an
impatience, a set of unrealistic expectations that lead to dejection when they aren't satisfied, and a failure to create a culture of
celebration for conservative achievement. In retrospect, we know that
1983 was a glorious year for conservatism. It was the first year of the
Reagan boom. During 1983, as Grover Norquist wrote in these pages in the
spring of 1984, "America in the throes of a supply-side recovery
created more jobs in 1983 than Canada has created since 1965 . . . and
as many jobs as Japan created in the entire decade of the 1970s."
That year was also the turning point in the great titanic struggle
against communism. As Elizabeth Spalding and Andrew Busch wrote in
Policy Review in the fall of 1993, "a series of events in 1983
would come together to stop the seemingly inexorable advance of Soviet
totalitarianism and to lay the ground- work for the eventual triumph of
the West." This was the year of Reagan's "Evil
Empire" speech, the launching of the Strategic Defense Initiative,
the failure of peace movements to stop Euromissile deployment, the
turning of the tide in El Salvador, and the liberation of Grenada.
But conservatives at the time were unaware of the historic
significance of these victories. They thought they were losing. They
still do. Maybe it's because conservatism still isn't acting
as if it wants to govern.
Conservatism today is in a leadership crisis, but the crisis is not
what most conservatives think it is. The central problem is not the
lackluster quality of the party's presidential candidates. Nor is
the central problem the timidity of the GOP congressional leadership in
pushing for tax relief, spend- ing cuts, and other conservative
priorities.
Instead the crisis is the conservative movement's dysfunctional
relationship with its elected political leaders. It would be unthinkable
for top liberal politicians to propose anything as significant as a
budget without consulting key groups like the AFL-CIO. But that's
exactly what GOP congressional leaders did with the 1997 budget
agreement: They simply made the best deal they thought they could get
with President Clinton, then handed it to conservative activists as a
fait accompli. There was no consultation with key conservative activists
in advance; no effort to find out which reforms conservative grass-roots
groups would mobilize for. GOP leaders seemed to regard the con-
servative movement as an annoyance, an angry constituency to be
mollified, not their strongest ally.
The movement is also to blame. Conservatives expect their elected
leaders to do all their work for them, to mobilize the grass roots, to
persuade Americans of the importance of conservative reforms. This
isn't how teachers unions or environmentalists or civil-rights
leaders conduct politics. Activists on the Left organize parades their
politicians can march in front of. Conservatives expect their pols to
fly the banners and beat the drums themselves. Then they whine when no
one marches.
Exhibit A is the budget showdown of 1995. Republicans in Congress cut
taxes, cut spending, boldly challenged Clinton to the point of shutting
down the government. And what support did they get, district by
district, precinct by precinct, from conservative activists around the
country? Zilch. Instead con- servatives groused that their leaders
hadn't devised the right communications strategy.
Conservatives are yearning for a national leader or leaders who will
galvanize and inspire the country through the national media. A
Churchill, an FDR, a Reagan. But this is a model of leadership for war
or a catastrophe like the Great Depression. A top-down, centralized
leadership style is inappropriate for peacetime, especially for a
movement that aims to decentralize power and return responsibility back
to states and to the people. Conservatism today doesn't require
national leaders with a dominating political presence or an eloquent
media personality; what it needs most are movement-builders who will
encourage and elicit leadership among the conservative movement and the
American people.
Ronald Reagan told Notre Dame students in 1981 that the West would
not simply contain communism, it would transcend communism. With the
failure of the lib- eral state, with the collapse of family and
community and school after 60 years of liberal control of domestic
policy and the national culture, con- servatives now have the
opportunity to roll back liberalism at home just as Ronald Reagan rolled
back the Evil Empire abroad. This will require, to borrow Reagan's
formulation, that Big Government not merely be contained. It must be
transcended. And to transcend the liberal welfare state, conservatives
must devote the next 20 to 30 years to building private and local
institutions that will outperform Big Government in addressing the
nation's needs. Needed are hundreds of thousands, perhaps millions,
of American citizens reasserting their leadership over failing schools,
failing criminal justice systems, fail- ing approaches to providing
opportunity for the poor, and an ugly, coarse cul- ture that brings out
the worst in human nature.
This magazine aims to report on, to celebrate, and to stimulate the
great wave of social entrepreneurship that will rebuild America. Our
publisher, Edwin J. Feulner, president of The Heritage Foundation for 20
years, has long described himself as an "optimistic
entrepreneur." Optimistic because he is confident that conservative
ideas of freedom and responsibility work. An entrepreneur because he
constantly looks for opportunities to advance conservative prin- ciples,
even in times of political setback, and because he has dedicated his
life to building an institution larger than himself that turns
conservative ideas into action. Conservatism will need more of this
institution-building spirit if it is to accomplish even more over the
next two decades than it has over the past 20 years.