By R. Emmett Tyrrell, Jr. on 4.10.08 @ 12:08AM
Washington's most engaging conservative runs circles around government's apologists.
WASHINGTON -- The other day I was beholding Fox News' beauteous
Martha MacCallum on her TV salon, The Live Desk, when a
smudge darkened my otherwise sunny afternoon.
Linda Chavez, that perennial conservative talking head, was
being interviewed about American politics, when, of a sudden, she
did something quite jarring. She referred to conservative activist
Grover Norquist in chill terms suggesting that this grover norquist
is an obscure figure somewhere out on the margins of politics. Her
condescension further suggested that Chavez does not approve of
this fellow, norquist. Frankly, I was embarrassed for her. Does
Chavez not realize that GROVER NORQUIST is a major player in
American politics and one of the giants of contemporary American
conservatism? My guess is that the beauteous Martha knows as much.
So do the politically knowledgeable members of The Live
Desk's audience.
Whatever is this conservative talking head's problem? It appears
she is another of those ambitious conservatives who suffer an
anthropological condition known by those who study marginalized or
emerging Third World communities as "crab antics." The term is used
in certain Caribbean societies where high achievers are always in
danger of being pulled back by their less successful neighbors.
They suffer the trials of the lead crab attempting to escape from a
bucket of crabs that is tipping over. There are still many
conservatives who attempt to pull back high-achieving
conservatives, in the hope this will win them will favor with
liberals. Thus we see the likes of Chavez attempting to diminish
the likes of Norquist.
Yet Norquist's achievements cannot be easily diminished. His
Americans for Tax Reform has helped to make tax cutting a major
element in modern American politics, and tax cutting has engendered
nearly three decades of pretty steady economic growth. Since the
middle of the 19th century the longest period of economic expansion
was 57 months. Then came Ronald Reagan with an expansion of 92
months, then Bill Clinton with 102 months, and now George W. Bush
with an expansion in the mid-70s somewhere. Norquist's "Taxpayer
Protection Pledge," with which he besieges candidates and elected
officials, has kept tax cutting a winning issue for
Republicans.
Now two former Bush speechwriters from the Bush II White House,
David Frum and Michael Gerson, have come along and prescribed Big
Government for what supposedly ails modern American conservatism.
Norquist has a better idea, namely keeping the conservative
movement -- the dominant political force since the first Reagan
Administration -- true to its principles, foremost of which is
limited government. He knows that Big Government is an inefficient
tool for reform and a threat to personal liberty. What is more, Big
Government is still viewed with suspicion by a majority of
Americans.
In a terrific new book, Norquist explains how conservatism can
remain dominant. He identifies the voting blocs that have made
conservatism a powerful and salutary force in modern politics:
anti-tax activists, gun-rights defenders, homeschoolers, religious
conservatives, and members of the investor class. He calls them
members of the Leave Us Alone Coalition and names his book
Leave Us Alone: Getting the Government's Hands Off Our Money,
Our Guns, Our Lives. Contrary to Frum and Gerson, who believe
Americans have tired of opposing Big Government, Norquist cites
trends that suggest this coalition has a long life ahead.
He notes that the investor class is growing, as are the numbers
of conservative people of faith. Red states are becoming more
populous while blue states are losing population. The homeschool
movement is growing and thanks to conservative organizers on campus
ever larger numbers of well-trained conservative activists are
graduating from college and continuing their political activism
after graduation. He thinks the conservative young are more
effective than their liberal peers. He believes public policies in
our growing economy are expanding the size of the investor class,
one policy being the growing number of individual retirement
accounts. Finally Norquist believes that the liberals, who he says
compose the Takings Coalition, have few policies that are
attractive to the American majority or capable of solving the
problems they supposedly address.
To those who think the conservative moment has passed, may I
introduce Grover Norquist?
topics:
Bill Clinton, Conservatism