By Jeffrey Lord on 2.6.07 @ 12:08AM
Celebrating two presidential birthdays.
The "political center" Abraham Lincoln and Ronald Reagan were
not.
In the wake of the 2006 elections came a surge of claims that
victory had gone to advocates (read: Democrats) of something known
as the political "center." Time magazine even put a
helpful diagram of this so-called "center" on its cover. To the
left a circle of blue, to the right a circle of red. The
co-centric, as they say in math class, was a sliver of purple in
the center. That bard of the imagined political center,
Washington Post columnist E. J. Dionne, was not alone in
cheering a "victory" for the sacred political home that so many
journalists of today celebrate with a devotion unseen since Tom
Cruise first spied Katie Holmes.
So it's worth taking a look back on Ronald Reagan's birthday to
both Reagan and that other February-born Republican president, both
of whom are lionized today as symbols of "the political
center."
The center in Lincoln's day was perfectly embodied by the man he
succeeded in the White House -- Democrat James Buchanan. A career
politician from Pennsylvania, Buchanan had served successively as a
state legislator, Congressman, U.S. Senator, Secretary of State and
Ambassador to Great Britain before winning election in 1856.
Buchanan had won the presidency by appealing to what was then the
center of American politics, a center that believed in "Union above
Section, Party above Faction." While sympathetic to the idea of a
gradual move to end slavery, he was vigorously opposed to
abolitionists and their insistence that slavery was a moral blot on
the American copybook. It was a political sentiment shared along
with a clear majority of Americans. "Touch this question of slavery
seriously," Buchanan warned, "and the Union from that moment is
dissolved."
Support of slavery was the undisputed center of American
politics, and had been since the founding of the country.
Presidents, senators and congressmen as well as state and local
officials by the thousands had not only been elected as supporters
of slavery, many had owned slaves themselves. Every Democratic
President of the United States from the party's founder, Jefferson,
right straight through to Buchanan was at one time or other the
owner of slaves. Indeed, for decades one could not get elected to
any office in many parts of the country -- much less win the
presidency -- if the slightest suspicion existed that the candidate
in question intended to do something as radical as abolish
slavery.
Yet touching the question of slavery seriously -- and thus
moving the center of American politics -- was just what Lincoln was
determined to do. In the words of his cousin John Hanks, slavery
"had run its iron into" Lincoln from the moment he had first seen
it with his own eyes during a flat-boat trip with Hanks down the
Mississippi to New Orleans in May of 1831. For years to come, long
before entering the White House thirty years after that encounter
in New Orleans, Lincoln thought and wrote about slavery and its
meaning for an America founded in the principles of the Declaration
of Independence. Focusing like a laser on the relationship between
law and morality, he was relentless in making the case that,
political center or not, popular or not, Americans had a moral
obligation to oppose the evil that was slavery.
BUCHANAN, THE VERY EMBODIMENT of the center with a long career
famous for his ability to go-along-to-get-along, was appalled by
Lincoln's position in the 1858 debates with Illinois's Democratic
Senator Stephen A. Douglas. According to his biographer, Buchanan
thought the debates, with Lincoln's focus on slavery and the rights
of men, "a tragedy." He regarded Lincoln's famous phrase that "a
house divided against itself cannot stand" as reckless rhetoric
that served only to inflame public opinion.
He was not alone in viewing Lincoln and his followers as
extremists well outside the political mainstream. When Lincoln,
elected president with a mere 43% of the vote, changed the
objective of his administration from simply holding the Union
together to ending slavery forever, his "centrist" critics pounced.
Infuriated at what they perceived as his radically extremist
policies they attacked the President for issuing the Emancipation
Proclamation and quite publicly moving his support of the
Thirteenth Amendment (which abolished slavery) to the top of the
administration's agenda. The criticism of Lincoln-as-extremist was
loud and frequent, with one Philadelphia newspaper calling him a
ringleader of "fanatical Abolitionism" who must take personal
responsibility for starting the Civil War and bringing about the
slaughter of thousands.
One hundred and twenty years later it was Reagan's turn to be
painted by his opponents as an out-of-the-mainstream extremist. As
with Lincoln, Reagan too had spent decades thinking, writing and
speaking about the evils of Communism. From his Hollywood days as
president of the Screen Actors Guild on through his years as the
spokesman for General Electric, Reagan honed his criticism of
Communism and what had evolved as the center of American political
thought on the Cold War. In the face of a political center that
sought detente with the Soviet Union and valued arms control
agreements and constant diplomacy as the penultimate evidence of
common sense, Reagan, like Lincoln before him, was fearless.
The political center of the day, and the men and women who
championed its politics, repeatedly attacked Reagan as an
extremist. Supporters of every single opponent he faced in two
races for the California governorship and three (including a
last-minute 1968 candidacy at the Republican Convention) for the
White House charged Reagan and his followers with being radical
extremists outside the center of American politics. Whether it was
Democrats like California Governor Pat Brown or President Jimmy
Carter, or Republicans like Presidents Richard Nixon, Gerald Ford
or Secretary of State Henry Kissinger, the establishment of the
political center was ferocious in its efforts to keep that center
from being moved an inch from where they believed it vital to be.
Their disdain for Reagan personally was particularly palpable,
viewing his all-too-obvious belief that the solution to the Cold
War was to seek flat-out victory as everything from simplistic to
dangerous.
THE RESULTS, OF COURSE, are obvious. It is Lincoln with the
monument on the Mall, the eternally towering reputation as the
Great Emancipator. Lincoln's stubborn notion that slavery should
not exist in America today is universally viewed as the bedrock of
the American political center, its morality and relationship to the
Declaration of Independence, natural law and a divine Creator cited
endlessly.
So too is victory in the Cold War taken as evidence of the
central truths about human freedom and liberty that Reagan preached
so endlessly -- and for which he was so repeatedly vilified as a
living, breathing advocate.
As we reflect this February on the lives of the two American
presidents whose careers shifted the political center of their own
day, conservatives could do worse then to ponder the lives of
Abraham Lincoln and Ronald Reagan. Both men rejected the siren song
of "consensus politics" that the political center of the day
inevitably chorused. There could be no "consensus" about slavery
beyond ending it, nor should there ever have been a "consensus" on
the Cold War beyond winning it.
Lincoln and Reagan looked at the center and saw the need to move
it.
They did.
Conservatives, take note.
topics:
Hollywood, Law, NATO, Communism