By John Samples on 1.15.08 @ 1:08AM
The Arizona senator thinks the First Amendment is a philosophical mistake. He aims to fix it.
Suddenly, John McCain has become the frontrunner for the
Republican presidential nomination. His support in national polls
among Republican voters has risen 16 points since December. He may
turn out to be the only person standing between Hillary Clinton or
Barack Obama and the presidency.
Since McCain is thought to be on the right, the choice might
appear easy for conservative voters. After all, both Clinton and
Obama are famously Progressive in politics and much else. However,
the choice this fall for conservatives may not turn out to be much
of a choice at all.
This view of McCain may seem absurd. After all, McCain has been
hawkish to say the least on the Iraq war when all the Democratic
candidates have been looking for ways out. McCain also seems to be
a soldier, concerned first and last for his honor. Democrats remain
uneasy with the military in part because the virtues of the warrior
ill fit the mores of the social worker. But McCain in the end is
more a Progressive than a conservative.
I should say what I mean by "conservative." George Will
correctly said that conservatives are trying to save America for
James Madison. Readers of Madison's famous Federalist No. 10 should
be struck by his concern for limited government and his fear of
unconstrained majority rule. He hoped the United States could limit
government by fragmenting power.
Madison, and the other founders for that matter, would have
rejected the notion that citizens lived for the state, the nation,
or some higher collective power. For them, individual liberty and
rights were moral goods, not a selfish claim against the state.
Matt Welch's new book McCain: The Myth of a Maverick
lays out the senator's philosophy. McCain once said "each and every
one of us has a duty to serve a cause great than our own
self-interest." That cause will be the good of the collective,
often defined as the nation or the national community.
That sounds fine and rather patriotic until your realize
McCain's statement puts the nation before the individual, duties
before rights (which are not mentioned), and denigrates the
concerns of individuals to mere self-interest. None of these ideas
have much to do with James Madison or conservatism.
McCAIN'S PROGRESSIVISM may be seen mostly clearly in his primary
legislative project: the McCain-Feingold campaign finance law. The
First Amendment to the Constitution is not Progressive. It gives
greater weight to the right of the individual to speak, to write,
and to associate than to any collective purpose the government
might have in suppressing speech. That right includes inevitably a
right to spend money to speak, to write, and to associate. Without
the right to spend, the other rights would have no concrete
meaning.
In contrast, Progressives see speech as a means to a collective
good -- improved public debate -- attained by government
restrictions on individual liberty. In this view, free speech and
free spending are mere self-interest or selfishness, vices to be
overcome by benevolent censors.
For McCain, such self-interest should be sacrificed to the
higher cause of "clean government." Hence, McCain's infamous
statement on Don Imus's radio show: "I would rather have a clean
government than one where quote First Amendment rights are being
respected, that has become corrupt. If I had my choice, I'd rather
have the clean government."
McCain also believes that the freedom to spend money in politics
fosters distrust of government. (He is wrong about that, but never
mind.) Why should distrust of government be a problem? James
Madison and most contemporary conservatives prize a skeptical and
critical attitude toward government.
But as Welch points out, McCain sees distrust of government as
"a ceiling on our greatness" and contrary to fostering a proper
pride in our institutions. Freedom of speech should give way to
collective goodness.
President McCain -- and yes, the words make me shudder even
subjunctively -- would pursue endless "reform" of campaign finance.
He would do so in part for political reasons. Such restrictions on
speech will quicken his transformation of the Republican Party away
from its Reaganite past and toward a Rooseveltian future. But
"reform" is more than a political tactic for McCain. For him, the
First Amendment is a philosophical mistake that limits our true
calling to national greatness. It is a mistake that might be
corrected by proper laws and compliant courts.
John McCain does not want to save America for James Madison. He
does not want to save America at all, because the Madisonian vision
remains, for conservatives at least, what America means, the
criterion of our hopes.
The election of a Progressive like Clinton or Obama would
deprive conservatives of power. The election of a Progressive like
McCain would deprive conservatives of both the government and the
means to resist Progressivism. Which is the lesser evil?
topics:
John McCain, Barack Obama, Hillary Clinton, Constitution, Law, Military, Iraq, NATO, Conservatism