WASHINGTON — The campaign trail has been cluttered with such
fantasticos as Senator John Pierre Kerry, Dr. Howard Dean,
Generalissimo Wesley Clark, and the Rev. Al Sharpton. Now I too
have had to venture onto the campaign trail, but a more civilized
trail it is. With the publication of my cheerful little tome on the
junior senator from New York, Madame Hillary: The Dark Road to
the White House, I am on what might be called the literary
campaign trail, booming the book’s merits hither and yon. That
means many appearances on broadcast media, especially talk radio.
The exercise is doubly rewarding, for it provides me with a vivid
glimpse into America. Talk radio has studios all over the
country.
Talk radio has changed over the years. It is now overwhelmingly
conservative, but that has not always been the case. A quarter of a
century ago it was populated with liberal hosts who contrary to
current conditions were overwhelmingly liberal and not very
cheerful, at least not when I was at the microphone across from
them. There was one in Boston, Williamson I believe was his name,
who was benign and considerate, but many were mad as hell. After I
left their studios they were even madder. One in Los Angeles might
even have actually been institutionalized after I let slip that
Ronald Reagan was reviving the economy.
At any rate, all the talk show hosts I have been talking with
recently have been conservative, and another thing about them: they
are all amiable and bright. I have yet to encounter a shouter, but
then I have yet to encounter a liberal. It is said that the comic
genius, Al Franken, is going to start a liberal talk show. He is
sufficiently angry for the role, and he is humorless. How can he
miss?
My series of chats with conservative talk show hosts began with
Sean Hannity, and he seems to be the new paradigm for talk show
hosts. He is amiable and bright and something else. He is earnest.
What makes him earnest is the parlous shape of world politics, post
9/11. I dedicated my book to Ted and Barbra Olson, and about the
first thing Hannity mentioned was his admiration for Barbara, who
of course died under heroic circumstances during the 9/11
treachery.
In the months after 9/11 it became popular to say that the vile
events of that day had “changed America forever.” A year or so
later, as the liberal Democrats could not resist the impulse to
snipe at the President, it became clear that not all of America had
been changed forever by 9/11.That atrocity, however, left a
long-term imprint on Hannity. You can perceive it in his new book,
Deliver Us From Evil. It is an important book.
It is about the reemergence of evil in the modern world. Hannity
rightly compares the evil of 9/11 with the sudden ambush of Pearl
Harbor. He recounts the feckless efforts of earlier politicians to
deal with terrorism and sees terrorism as a long-standing threat to
our freedoms. The Clintons get a special section in the hortatory
pages of this book, for they did next to nothing to suppress the
terrorists, though during the 1990s the terrorists’ provocations
were bloody and numerous.
Hannity’s book is hopeful, though his estimate of the Democratic
phonies arrayed against the Administration is sobering. If any of
the Democratic presidential candidates triumphs over Bush, America
is in real trouble. Though, if the Rev. Sharpton were to win the
Democratic nomination and then the presidency, the prospects for
the Republic are not all that grim. Sharpton could always be
removed from office for tax evasion before grave damage was
done.
The optimism of Hannity is characteristic of the conservative
talks show hosts I have been meeting. They represent a refreshingly
positive conservative alternative to the otherwise liberal media.
That they have replaced the liberal talk show hosts of a generation
past is cause for optimism. Perhaps in the years ahead
conservatives will be as numerous in televisionland as they are in
radioland.