Packer and his sources advance some cogent criticisms of the
state of conservatism, but the whole piece suffers from a failure
to distinguish ideas from electoral politics. So do a lot of the
books and articles about remaking the right. I think it is
important to make distinctions between two trends here that are
traveling together: The observation that conservatives need to
adapt to a new set of issues that are different from the problems
Reagan faced in 1980 and that the Gingrich Republicans faced in
1994 is correct. There need to be conservative policies that
address voter concerns about health care, energy prices, and
middle-class economic anxieties. Expanding the tax credit for
children and shifting to payroll tax-cutting are important ways to
make tax cuts relevant to a wider group of voters, even if those
tax cuts can't be as easily justified in supply-side terms.
The trouble is the tendency to take this thinking a step
further: conceding that essentially liberal means of addressing the
country's problems are better than conservative ones. If we believe
this -- or we believe that conservatism was a onetime development
relevant only to winning the Cold War and ending stagflation -- we
should become liberals. Let's not try to reinvent Rockefeller
Republicanism under another name.
Other conservatives think conservative policies and ideas can't
be sold to the American people. But that's a problem for
politicians and political strategists, not conservative writers and
thinkers. It is an inability to tell the difference between the two
that harms conservatism as much as anything else.
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