There is an old saying among
conservatives that when we send our people to
Washington, they're not our people anymore. Ronald
Reagan was the exception that proved the rule, and it is a rule
that conservatives have been living with since conservatives first
emerged from the shadows in the 1950s. Conservatives often become
disillusioned in election campaigns that a politician who is
"pretty conservative" will be, well, "pretty conservative" after he
gets elected. It didn't work with Eisenhower, it didn't work with
Nixon, it didn't work with George H.W. Bush, and it isn't working
with George W.
The conservative's job is not to be a good
Republican, but to keep Republicans honest, to hold their feet to
the fire. So what is going on now is exactly what should be going
on -- conservatives telling the congressional leaders and the
President that being "pretty conservative" (and you have to wonder
what "pretty" means sometimes) isn't good enough. If it means
losing an election or two, that is the price we need to
pay.
Do you miss Ronald Reagan as much as I
do?
About the Author
Alfred S. Regnery is the publisher of The American Spectator. He is the former president and publisher of Regnery Publishing, Inc., which produced twenty-two New York Times bestsellers during his tenure. Regnery also served in the Justice Department during the Reagan Administration, worked on the U.S. Senate staff, and has been in private law practice. He currently serves on several corporate and non-profit boards, and is the Chairman of the Intercollegiate Studies Institute .
His first book, Upstream: The Ascendance of American Conservatism, was published in 2008. The book has been praised as one of the best authoritative accounts on the history of the American conservative movement.