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In my latest column for the American Conservative, I argue that there is some reason to hope the new Tea Party senators will be more serious about spending than the conservative congressional leaders before them:

South Carolina Sen. Jim DeMint voted against the Medicare prescription drug benefit and No Child Left Behind while in the House, defying the Bush administration and the GOP congressional leadership. So did Jeff Flake, the Arizona Republican running to join DeMint in the Senate. They are social conservatives, but see the national debt as the paramount moral issue.

Cruz lacks their legislative voting record, but it is nonetheless intriguing that he wrote his senior thesis at Princeton on the Ninth and Tenth Amendments—two neglected parts of the Bill of Rights that are the key to reasserting limits on the federal leviathan. Mike Lee wrote a book straightforwardly arguing that most post-New Deal federal programs, including the big entitlements, are effectively unconstitutional. Rand Paul is both the literal and figurative son of the most successful libertarian politician in modern times.

Moreover, as senators they will have clout that House backbenchers — and even many House leaders — never had. Daniel Larison objects that other than Rand Paul they are all foreign policy hawks. I’ll acknowledge that none of them is Ron Paul. Even Rand isn’t a carbon copy (few of them would have won their primaries if they weren’t closer to the Republican foreign policy consensus than Paul).

But Marco Rubio didn’t run on a platform that included getting out of Afghanistan, abolishing the TSA, and opposing the NDAA while appearing with Ron Paul. Ted Cruz did. In an interview with me, Mike Lee criticized the Libya war on substantive as well as constitutional grounds and didn’t sound too enthusiastic about our other recent wars. Although Jim DeMint voted for the Iraq war, he was also one of just four Senate Republicans who voted to end its authorization.

Admittedly, Rand Paul is the only one I’d more or less guarantee would vote against war with Iran unless there was a much stronger casus belli than there was with Iraq. yet my larger point was that these senators would be more reliable than past Republican leaders when it came to limiting the domestic functions of the federal government. Whether they apply those lessons to government abroad remains to be seen.

UPDATE: Larison responds again. Look, these candidates aren’t noninterventionists (although a few of them, like Thomas Massie and Kerry Bentivolio, essentially are). But in the not-too-distant past, the most conservative candidates running in a Republican primary would have been without fail the most enthusiastic champions of the Bush Doctrine and dead-enders in support of unpopular foreign wars. The fact that these candidates don’t fit that description doesn’t necessarily mean they will be cautious on Iran, but it does mean something. Changing the incentives politicians face is often more important than even changing the politicians.

View all comments (10) |

Ken (Old Texican)| 8.7.12 @ 7:19PM

Mr Antle,
if Iran sucessfully tests a nuke...the whole world changes. Click.
Read my book www.americaalonesaidno.com

JimT| 8.7.12 @ 8:11PM

There won't be any votes on whether to go to war with Iran, if Emperor Barackus Obamus deems that a war is needed to boost his chances at the polls, there will be a war. What's all this piffle about voting?

Mender| 8.7.12 @ 8:13PM

I'm very pleased about this. I'm not some isolationist fool, but the sooner the conservative movement puts Iraq behind us the better.

JimH| 8.8.12 @ 7:44AM

Using the terms hawks and doves already tries to slant the argument. I suspect most of the non-interventionist right supports a strong defense and favor a strong decisive retaliation, rather than some sort of incremental proportional response should America be attacked or credibly threatened.

Ryan| 8.8.12 @ 8:44AM

I think my problem with their side is what constitutes "defense." Okay, we pull back - but do we allow a strong intelligence to predict and monitor others?

Sean| 8.8.12 @ 10:41AM

Yeah the doves want a strong national defense and a declaration of war if needed. When we go to war we fight all out and then leave. It is not up to us to pay to rebuild the country and no nation building.

But first we need to recognize that third rate conventional armies are no threat to us. To prevent terrorism here all we have to do is prevent Muslims from radical states from visiting.

Reggie Love| 8.8.12 @ 8:57AM

I also think Ron Johnson was pretty critical of the Libyan mission. Wisconsin is a pretty dovish/isolationist state traditionally.

Ryan| 8.8.12 @ 9:54AM

I don't think that one has to be dovish to be extremely critical of the Libyan situation...

Reggie Love| 8.8.12 @ 9:58AM

That's not what I meant. Wisconsin is traditionally dovish though,which makes me think that Johnson won't be a neocon like Rubio or Ayotte.

Ankylosaurus| 8.8.12 @ 5:32PM

I'm seeing a whole lot of denial and short memories here. Doesn't anybody remember that George Bush got elected on a strongly stated platform of "No more nation building"? Reality has a way of dealing with you, even if you try to avoid dealing with it.

More Blog Posts by W. James Antle, III

http://spectator.org/blog/2012/08/07/tea-party-hawks-and-doves

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