After writing the
piece on Paul Weyrich for Friday’s online TAS, I
found out a friend had a connection to Richard Viguerie, one of
the pioneers of the modern conservative movement. He
recalled a decade beginning in the in mid-seventies of breakfasts
with Weyrich and other conservatives, including Newt Gingrich at
one point, in his home.
Viguerie, like everyone I’ve spoken to so far, had a high opinion
of Weyrich and his value to the movement. “Paul was a master
strategist. He saw around corners. There were many
occasions when he alerted our group to issues well ahead of
time.” When I pressed him to explain Weyrich’s virtue as a
strategist, he said, “Many people have mentioned that Paul coined
the term ‘moral majority.’ That’s not so much. His influence
was bigger than that. It was Paul’s idea to bring the
religious right on board.”
One of the things that stood out most as I listened to
Viguerie was his recollection of Weyrich’s force within the
context of a meeting. “When Paul had something to say, he spoke
with confidence and authority. You had to be awfully sure of
yourself to contradict Paul. I know I rarely did. The man was
clearly a political genius.”
Viguerie also reinforced the positive things I’ve heard about
Weyrich’s character. “Paul had one face for the world. One face.
Period. Once he made a commitment, that was it.” He echoed
others, too, in emphasizing that Weyrich was not a self-promoter.
He was committed to the movement and not to building up his own
reputation.
His estimate of Weyrich’s contribution to the movement? “He
ranked with Goldwater, Buckley, and Reagan. He was a major
contributor.” It sounds grandiose. I don’t claim to be in a
position to evaluate the statement. But one thing is certain.
Viguerie is not the only person I’ve heard put Weyrich in that
class.