On December 3, 2008,The American
Spectatorheld its 2008 Robert L. Bartley Annual
Dinner, a gala banquet held for Washington Club members who have
supported the magazine over the years. During the event, Justice
Samuel Alito spoke with great wit and Robert D. Novak was honored
with the prestigious Barbara Olson Award. Editor in Chief R. Emmett
Tyrrell, Jr. delivered the remarks below during the
dinner.
And so the lamentable November 4 presidential election is
entombed in history… and in keeping with the benevolent wishes of
the mainstream moron media the American conservative movement once
again enters the wilderness. In the wilderness, all we shall have
to comfort us is the L.L. Bean catalogue. As you might have noted,
we have distributed several versions of the renowned Bean catalogue
on your tables. My personal favorite is the fishing catalogue.
Regnery prefers the hunting catalogue. Pleszczynski is waiting for
his very own Polish-language edition. I urge you all to take your
L.L. Bean catalogues home with you tonight. Study them assiduously.
Learn the bird calls.
Winston Churchill, during his wilderness years, was comforted by
Pol Roger and a fistful of Havanas. Unfortunately, Champagne has
become very pricey, and nowadays smoking is malum
prohibitum almost everywhere. Even in the wilderness a lit
cigar would be highly controversial. Thus we American conservatives
are left with L.L. Bean as our solace and our guide. In my fishing
catalogue there are many varieties of warm and sturdy boots,
colorful parkas, and a product that I am particularly curious
about, “breathable rainwear.” I ask myself, “Am I to breathe it or
will it breathe me?”--all very exciting. So perhaps the wilderness
will not be so bad--especially for those of us who drive
Hummers.
Of course, to hear some conservatives, for instance David
Brooks, David Frum--both being members of the conservative
movement’s Davidian Branch--the rest of us are going to be out
there with the flora and the fauna for many, many years.
Personally, I hope to get a tent not far from Sarah Palin. She is
very cute and can handle a firearm. Shortly after the November 4
election, David Brooks, writing from his sofa at the New York
Times, predicted that the Republican Party will veer to the
right and suffer still more defeats. That means that we shall be
out there in the poison ivy with the wolves and the coyotes for a
long time. I pray that Alaska’s curvaceous governor will keep her
shootin’ iron handy.
Now, as I look around this grand and distinguished audience I
can see the worried looks on your faces. Probably it has occurred
to you that as the Prophet Obama surrounds himself with
Clintonistas many of you will be forced to become virtual Boat
People. Well, relax. I have arranged the boat. Our friend Taki
Theodoracopulos has promised that he will have his yacht,
Bushido II, at anchor off Nantucket. And if you cannot
make it to Nantucket, try Cape Cod. Perhaps the Kennedys will
supply a boat. They have been trying to get us out of the country
for years.
Of course, we conservatives have been thrust into the wilderness
before: in 1964, in 1976, and in 1992. Every time the experience
has proved to be highly amusing: recall if you will, LBJ (we called
him Old Beagle Ears), Jimmy Carter (we called him the Wonder Boy),
and Bill Clinton (we called him many things: the Boy President, Boy
Clinton, and our Ithyphallic President). Who needs Pol Roger or the
accoutrements advertised in the L.L. Bean catalogue when the
Democratic Party provides entertainment like that?
Incidentally, after every stay in the wilderness we
conservatives have come back stronger. The reason we keep coming
back is that we are not a party of prophets or messiahs but a party
of principles. Our principles have been preferable to the dreams
and fantasies of the likes of LBJ and Jimmy Carter.
Now Boy Clinton was a different kettle of fish. He was the one
who said “the era of big government is over.” Well, that seemed to
be true, until this autumn when the bell tolled for
government-ordered sub-prime mortgages and the social engineering
of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. Now we have big government as
America has never had it before, and it is going to be up to
conservatives to sound the alarm when the Democrats are negligent
about returning to the prosperous America of the late 20th century
created as it was by tax cuts and free markets.
Our belief in free markets is one of the reasons that our
critics think that we are going to be shivering in the wilderness.
They seem to agree with the heralds of the incoming administration
that the time is now for a new New Deal. Yet as the best recent
scholarship has made clear, the old New Deal presided over nearly a
decade of a no-growth economy with double-digit unemployment--at
times 25 percent of the workforce was unemployed. In today’s
looming intellectual struggles to return America to free markets
and to growth economics, we conservatives are going to emerge from
the wilderness sooner than the Davidian conservatives anticipate.
As the distinguished economist Henry Manne recently observed in
Forbes magazine, today, unlike the 1930s, we have think
tanks and publications that will be at the center of the public
debate, arguing for a return to Reaganite prosperity with Reaganite
economic therapies.
Nor are we going to be alone in this debate. The majority of the
American people side with us. In an October 2 Rasmussen survey,
fully 59 percent of those polled agreed with Ronald Reagan’s
pronouncement enunciated in his first inaugural address a quarter
of a century ago: “Government is not the solution to our problem;
government is the problem.” Moreover, even after the congressional
Republicans tarnished the brand of conservatism, more Americans
claim to be conservative than liberal and by a lot. In both the
elections of 2006 and 2008 a solid 34 percent of Americans claimed
to be conservatives. Liberalism’s number increased from 2006 to
2008 by but one percentage point, from 21 to 22 percent
So let us not panic. We libertarian conservatives are the people
whose ideas have spread throughout the world, to India, to China.
Even Sen. Obama seems to be picking them up. This September, as he
slipped behind Sen. John McCain in the polls, Sen. Obama finally
identified himself as a tax cutter. Today he is an advocate of
growth. Possibly in the months ahead he will keep the lights on at
the Pentagon.
Also, he is somewhat of a traditionalist. When it came to
choosing a vehicle for his political ascent he chose not the
guerrilla band of Bill Ayers and Bernardine Dohrn but the highly
thought of Daley Machine of old Chicago. Al Regnery and I, as you
might know, originally hailed from Chicagoland. As ex-Chicagoans we
know what Sen. Obama had in mind when, during the campaign, he
repeated over and again that he was going to "fix Washington’s
broken government.” In Chicago the word “fix” is pregnant with
meaning. In fact, when president Obama is in the White House there
will undoubtedly be a special office where parking tickets can be
fixed and property taxes fixed. Your recently deceased relatives
will be able to vote again. When the President-elect announced his
jobs program for 2.5 million Americans, we ex-Chicagoans knew what
he meant: hundreds of thousands of Americans are about to become
sewer inspectors, parking lot commissioners, co-pilots on garbage
trucks. All that is required of them is that they vote and vote
often.
IF YOU WILL ALLOW ME A moment of self-satisfaction, I saw it all
coming. As early as 2006, in finishing up my book on the Clintons’
post-White House extravagances, The Clinton Crack-Up, I
prophesied that a new generation of Democrats was emerging to
challenge Hillary--at the time, the so-called “inevitable”
Democratic nominee. I made the point very publicly. Check the
transcript of Brian Lamb’s May 2007 interview with me on C-Span.
There I predicted, “Hillary’s going to have real problems getting
the nomination. A new generation’s come up….” I suppose that went
down with the mainstream moron media as but another extravagant
canard from another tiresome Clinton Hater.
Truth be known, I hate no one. The American Spectator
hates no one. We greet the challenges ahead with cheerful
anticipation. Our aim is to be the rallying point for a revitalized
conservative movement. At the beginning of the conservative
movement, Henry Regnery was one of the movement’s founding fathers.
He was also his son, Al’s, predecessor on The American
Spectator’s Board of Directors. Conservatives such as Henry
Regnery laid down the principles of a movement that has moved from
obscurity to capturing the White House, spreading the message of
individual liberty throughout the world, even into lands once
crushed under Communist tyranny, lands liberated by our message of
freedom and our military resolve. We shall fight on for personal
liberty. And if this president will lead us we shall follow him.
Either that or we shall find another defender of
liberty.
About the Author
R. Emmett Tyrrell, Jr. is the founder and editor in chief of The American Spectator. He is the author of the forthcoming The Death of Liberalism, published by Thomas Nelson Inc. His previous books include the New York Times bestseller Boy Clinton: the Political Biography; The Impeachment of William Jefferson Clinton; The Liberal Crack-Up; The Conservative Crack-Up; Public Nuisances; The Future that Doesn't Work: Social Democracy's Failure in Britain; Madame Hillary: The Dark Road to the White House; The Clinton Crack-Up; and After the Hangover: The Conservatives' Road to Recovery.
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