By J. Peter Freire on 3.10.08 @ 1:12PM
Colleague Matt Welch of Reason gives me
a reason (finally) to watch Bill Moyers's show. He sheds light on McCain's
faith in government as the tool for greatness, and has a
fascinating historical take on when conservatives became
Republicans first:
I think it was in the Richard Nixon presidency. Up
until that moment, conservatives had been the biggest critics of
the imperial presidency. They were the biggest critics of the way
executive power was abuse by John F. Kennedy, by Lyndon Johnson, by
FDR before them ... But when Richard Nixon was abusing that power
and he was attacked by the press, who conservatives have always
hated, and Democrats, who the conservatives have always hated, they
rallied around him.
...one of the only philosophies
that [McCain] elucidates in his book, his five books that he's
written, is to restore executive power at the expense of Congress,
especially when it comes to foreign policy and the making of war.
It is basically the only interest that he shows in political
philosophy in his books.
I'm not certain if I agree, re: the movement's concern about
imperialism. Conservatives were certainly interested in fighting
the Soviet Union where necessary, and Johnson's escalation of
Vietnam was seen as a scary mutation of what was originally an
outsourced. fight. They didn't come to Nixon's defense
because they were discarding their own philosophy, but instead
because Nixon was being attacked for his lifelong anti-Communist
stances, including the discovery of Alger Hiss. The fight was about
what to do about Communism, and at its head stood a flawed man that
conservatives had to nonetheless support.
topics:
Foreign Policy, Books, Law, Communism
J. Peter Freire is contributing editor of The American Spectator. Freire first came to the Spectator as an intern and editorial assistant under a journalism fellowship from the Intercollegiate Studies Institute. Since then, he has written for the New York Times, Reason, and Human Events. Prior to returning to The American Spectator, he was editor of Brainwash, an online journal of opinion from America's Future Foundation, worked for the Evans-Novak Political Report, and researched and wrote for the New York Times. Freire studied English Renaissance literature and political science at Cornell University, where he served as senior editor and columnist at the Cornell Review. He is also a 2008 Phillips Foundation Journalism Fellow and the CPAC 2009 Journalist of the Year.
You can reach his Twitter page by clicking here, or follow him @JPFreire.