The story, as I once read it, goes like this.
January 20, 1961.
A car rolls along an Illinois highway, the radio tuned to the
inaugural of John F. Kennedy and the start of the Kennedy-Johnson
years. A mesmerized, adoring media has the full glare of its
attention focused on the return of Democrats to power after an
eight-year absence from the White House.
In the front passenger seat of the car, working quietly, sits a
man scribbling intently on a speech he will be delivering shortly
to a small group of listeners. There will be no national
spotlight focusing on what the man has to say this day. There
will be no cheering thousands, much less millions to hear his
words. Yet the man concentrates on his speech anyway, honing and
honing again the thoughts he has been shaping now for almost a
decade. Shaping, sharpening, thinking them through to match them
with the reality of what he has learned in his life, a life that
itself began on a distant, wintry Illinois morning.
His thoughts as he has lately been expressing them, he knows,
have made him unpopular in certain quarters. Unlike the accolades
for the new president, the man has been the target of a
dismissive yet barely restrained anger. He was, it was sneered,
strident. Divisive. A voice, said union leaders of this man who
was himself a union leader, of right-wing extremism. Those were
the more polite criticisms in what was becoming a rising chorus
of name calling that, to the extent anyone was paying attention,
was long on volume and short on truth.
Later that year, in St. Paul, Minnesota, to ride in the Winter
Carnival parade and speak at a high school assembly of a few
hundred kids a resolution would be passed by the local teachers
union. Educators! They would demand he not be allowed to speak
because he was, they said, a "controversial personality." He
would speak anyway, a teacher quietly coming up to him to
apologize and admitting that although afraid to admit it to his
peers, the teacher agreed with what he had to say.
Still later this year the man would receive a phone call he would
never forget. It was a strange call. For years the man had dealt
directly with the people who sponsored his speaking engagements
along with the weekly television show, a show of theatrical
dramas, the man hosted on Sunday nights on one of America's three
television networks. Yet this time he found himself speaking
instead to an executive from an advertising agency. The ad
executive was making an odd inquiry. He wanted to know if the man
would be willing to continue his speaking tours but limit his
subject to commercial pitches for the products of his sponsors.
Would he be willing to stop making talks with titles like
"Encroaching Government Controls"? The man said, well, no. He
was, as ever, unfailingly polite, but he could not agree to stop
talking about these issues. Twenty-four hours later, the man's
show was canceled.
Abruptly, Ronald Reagan, the host of General Electric Theater,
was out of a job.
SOMETIMES I WONDER if there will ever be a real appreciation of
Ronald Reagan's sheer courage as he pursued the hard reality of
advocating conservative principles. There were, that winter of
1961, no talk radio hosts to defend him or give him a platform
for his views. There was no one who understood as he did, who
could take the time to educate on the principles at stake, much
less defend him as he lost his job for speaking so publicly of
his beliefs. There were no think tanks to back him up or provide
him with the material he used to present challenging specifics on
taxes or jobs or national security or schools or health. There
was most certainly no television network that would even consider
giving his views a fair shake or even dare to acknowledge there
was even a serious "other side" to the issues of the day.
There was, in short, no one out there but Reagan himself and a
small handful of others who were willing to make the case for
conservatism, popularity be damned, whenever and wherever they
could make it. Goldwater had his Senate seat, Buckley his
magazine, Regnery his book publishing company, but it was a
pretty thin crowd. And with liberals riding herd with control of
the White House as well as Congress, there was, as he found out
with his dismissal from his job, an understandable wariness of
the new people in power.
As the returns from the 2008 election finally pour in tonight,
Ronald Reagan's lonely car ride across the Illinois prairie in
the winter of 1961 is something conservatives need to remember.
Whatever happens this election night it will be necessary for
conservatives not just to continue Reagan's journey but to
understand the principles he spoke about are in fact timeless.
Were they Reagan's principles? Yes. Hard won and hard learned
they were, too. What gets lost all too frequently in our
political dialogue is that Reagan's principles were in fact
conservative principles. They were around long before Reagan
himself, if not articulated as well or as thoroughly.
The Opposition -- what has become modern liberalism -- cannot
permanently succeed. Will not succeed. Ever. Why? Because
conservatism is to the political world what gravity is to the
physical world. It is timeless, constantly at work, manifesting
itself always in visible realities. (Why do you think Rush is a
more valuable media property than Dan Rather?) Were he here today
Reagan would instantly understand the political shell game that
is once again in progress. You can just see him listening with
that patient smile as the 2008 Obama model of liberalism insists
that various social miseries have emerged because of the actions
of evil oil companies or a bad president or some other collection
of men and women somewhere. You can just see the slight shaking
of his head, the twinkle in his eyes as he hears an insistence
that if only good and really smart people (like, well, liberals)
were in charge, all would be right with the world. Remembering
that House Speaker Tip O'Neill used to insist to him that people
who made $50,000 were rich and should have their taxes raised, he
would know what's afoot as the 2008 liberals drop the definition
of who is rich from $250,000 to $200,000 to $150,000 to $120,000.
Then he would say with a friendly smile: "Well, there you go
again."
IN THE BATTLE BETWEEN collectivism and individual liberty, Reagan
taught that individual liberty will always -- always -- win. It
is a victory that, yes, may come slowly. But triumph it will in
the end. This is why there is no Berlin Wall or Soviet Union to
debate in 2008. Keep your eye on the ball.
American political life is understandably viewed by many in the
four-year bites of presidential terms. Yet Reagan knew that
history is a river not a block of ice frozen in time. Economics
and national security were at issue when the Constitution was
written in 1787 -- and they remain an issue today. The
difference, of course, is that 200-plus years of American history
(actually, much more than that of world history) is supposed to
teach to even the dull-minded, not to mention those who style
themselves as The Smart People, what works and what decidedly
does not.
One may wish to take a giant leap and fly straight to the moon
unaided, but since Newton understood the significance of a
falling apple an understanding of gravity has taken hold with
most humans. To quote Milton Friedman citing F.A. Hayek, "the
validity of Hayek's central insight -- that coordination of men's
activities through central direction and through voluntary
cooperation are roads going in very different directions…central
direction to poverty for the ordinary man, voluntary cooperation
a road to plenty" is what can surely be termed the reality of
political gravity.
Yet in spite of the astounding reality of progress inherent with
conservatism, the so-called "smart people" -- liberal
intellectuals and politicians aplenty -- keep returning to the
idea that gravity (the success of free enterprise, competition,
private property, limited government and, in national security,
what Reagan called "peace through strength") simply does not
exist. Marching backwards they always believe they are looking
forward. Like Charlie Brown, they believe that THIS time Lucy
will let them actually kick the football.
What this says as Americans go to vote this day is something
Ronald Reagan had come to understand to his core: the battle for
freedom, as his friend Friedman also said, must be won over and
over again. For Reagan, fearlessly clear of thought and eye, that
battle was being fought whether he was speeding unnoticed across
the American heartland in January of 1961 or being sworn in as
president himself twenty years to the day in 1981.
SO NOW IS IT with conservatives today. Ronald Reagan is enshrined
in history. But conservative principles are alive and well. If
there is to be an Obama presidency by the end of this night it
will be our turn to fight the latest chapter in the ongoing
battle for freedom. Will it be easy? Of course not. The spirit of
bullying intolerance that cost Ronald Reagan his job in 1961 is
at large yet again, this time threatening to shut down talk radio
or throwing reporters off of Obama's plane or using government to
investigate Joe the Plumber. There are new generations who have
been conned into believing that there is no such thing as
political gravity. That if only the right people are in charge of
the newest and best notions of central planning and appeasement
all will be well. Some hear the name "Reagan" and make no
connection between his career's worth of teachings and the
results produced by the Barney Frank's of the world, the
disasters of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. They genuinely do not
understand that having the government take from Peter to
subsidize Paul -- all in the name of spreading the wealth and
ending poverty and being fair -- produces at its end nothing more
than a vast jungle of special interest groups, fat-cat lobbyists,
welfare and, yes, poverty and lost homes. Worse still, some
conservatives have simply fled the field of battle
altogether.
We begin again. Watching, if the polls are correct, for an
Obama-era to lift off with the same moral superiority of that
January day in 1961, yet inescapably headed down the same path
that always ends in some version of the same way: with a
government run economy in ruins and some national security
nightmare stalking us all.
And if the polls are wrong? If we awake on Wednesday to
President-elect McCain? It will still be time for conservatives
to re-ground the Republican Party in First Principles.
Conservatism is not in trouble -- the Republican Party is. Too
many of its leaders at the ballot box or in its conservative
journals have lost sight of the blindingly obvious: Ronald Reagan
was not just a winning personality whose time has come and gone.
He was in fact the living embodiment of a set of timeless
principles that are not only the gravity of this political world
we live in but its oxygen as well.
To borrow his once famous query: If not now, when? If not us,
who?