While putting fresh newspaper in the birdcage this morning, I
couldn’t help but notice the New York Times column
from David Brooks, who takes a potshot at conservative
radio hosts who boosted presidential candidates, including Fred
Thompson. When not taste-tasting the latest latte flavors at
exurban malls, Brooks can be found on PBS doing his best
imitation of David Gergen.
Brooks belittles “lazy pundits,” of which he may be counted. How
else to explain his attempt to portray conservatives as the
entire Republican Party, or his seeming lack of understanding of
the role individuals like Rush, Sean and Mark Levin play within
the conservative movement?
It may be that Rush or Mark Levin, or now Fred, for that matter,
endorse or encourage support for a particular cause, but
conservatives, particularly grassroots conservatives, are
independent thinkers. They do not simply walk in lock step with
their radio overlords, unlike pundits in Washington who enjoy
getting a call from the Obama White House and touting The One at
every turn.
This is a good thing, not a failing. Republicans lost the
election in 2008, not because of misplaced faith in the power of
talk radio; they lost because as the party they broke trust with
the conservative values that most Americans on some level agree
with. And these are the same values many of our radio
commentators espouse. And while conservative talk radio may
not stuff the ballot box, it does have an impact: from the
immigration debates of 2007-08 to the tea parties, the health
care debate, and what I am sure now will be the critical debate
over Obama’s bungling of Afghanistan.
Men like Rush, Sean, Mark and Fred were sticking to their
principles, and talking about those principles, like free
markets, the rule of law, respect for life, federalism, long
before the 2008 campaigns, and have continued to do so. They
haven’t shifted with the political winds. The same cannot be said
for Mr. Brooks.