Powerline’s John Hinderaker has a short
article (pdf) making the contrarian
argument that Nelson Rockefeller’s brand of politics carried the
day. The piece appears, appropriately enough, in the newsletter of
Nelson A. Rockefeller Center for Public Policy. I’m afraid
Hinderaker’s thesis depends on a definition of Rockefeller
Republicanism that is both dumbed down and divorced from the
history of American politics over the last four decades.
Hinderaker’s argument is basically this: Rockefeller was an
internationalist and so are most members of both political parties.
Rockefeller was a pro-business liberal; there are now Democrats who
are pro-business liberals. Rockfeller was a Republican who accepted
big government; there are now lots of Republicans who accept big
government. He writes, “Republicans no longer are trying to undo
the New Deal, and Democrats no longer dream of a socialist
future.”
Most of the above is true, but a lot of context is missing. The
1964 fight between Barry Goldwater and Nelson Rockefeller was about
a lot of things but America being “fully engaged abroad” wasn’t one
of them. Goldwater wasn’t an “isolationist,” nor would that label
apply to most Republican leaders since Dwight Eisenhower beat
Robert Taft for the nomination in 1952 (Taft wasn’t an
“isolationist” either, exactly). Rockefeller’s welfare policies in
New York were exactly the kind Republicans and moderate Democrats
wanted to reform and reverse in the 1990s.
Rockefeller’s “willingness to spend money and, if necessary,
raise taxes” was rejected by Ronald Reagan’s heirs in the
Republican Party to such an extent that Reagan’s tax increases as
governor of California might have derailed his nomination today. If
you don’t believe me, ask Mike Huckabee. Rockefeller Republicans
held a far more expansive view of government than even such
Northeastern moderates of today as Rudy Giuliani and Mitt Romney.
Christine Todd Whitman ran for governor of New Jersey in 1993 on a
platform of slashing tax rates 30 percent across the board, which
isn’t very Rockefellerite.
There were some conservatives in the 1960s who wanted to see the
right align with the Rockfeller Republicans. There are some who
would like to see conservatism become some combination of
Rockefeller Republicanism and Tory socialism today. But a more
careful examination shows that the 1970s, 1980s, and 1990s weren’t
kind to the people who considered themselves Rockefeller
Republicans.