Why Australian conservatives are having such a losing streak lately?

Thanks again to the Arts & Letters Daily comes this very enlightening New Yorker piece:

The Fall of Conservatism

Have the Republicans run out of ideas?

by George Packer

Even if much about US conservatism strikes this older Australian as quite alien, there is no doubt that in our own conservative ranks much has been borrowed. It may well be that the woes the ironically named, from a US viewpoint, Australian Liberal Party, having been a heavy borrower over the last decade or two, is now experiencing echo the death throes of its US counterparts. Aside then from its importance as a diagnosis of US politics, Packer’s article — even his name is ironic for an Australian, though this is coincidence — has many lessons for us, especially for certain pundits and journalists.

How it has worked

Here is a sample:


…Nixon was coldly mixing and pouring volatile passions. Although he was careful to renounce the extreme fringe of Birchites and racists, his means to power eventually became the end. Buchanan gave me a copy of a seven-page confidential memorandum—“A little raw for today,” he warned—that he had written for Nixon in 1971, under the heading “Dividing the Democrats.” Drawn up with an acute understanding of the fragilities and fault lines in “the Old Roosevelt Coalition,” it recommended that the White House “exacerbate the ideological division” between the Old and New Left by praising Democrats who supported any of Nixon’s policies; highlight “the elitism and quasi-anti-Americanism of the National Democratic Party”; nominate for the Supreme Court a Southern strict constructionist who would divide Democrats regionally; use abortion and parochial-school aid to deepen the split between Catholics and social liberals; elicit white working-class support with tax relief and denunciations of welfare. Finally, the memo recommended exploiting racial tensions among Democrats. “Bumper stickers calling for black Presidential and especially Vice-Presidential candidates should be spread out in the ghettoes of the country,” Buchanan wrote. “We should do what is within our power to have a black nominated for Number Two, at least at the Democratic National Convention.” Such gambits, he added, could “cut the Democratic Party and country in half; my view is that we would have far the larger half.”

The Nixon White House didn’t enact all of these recommendations, but it would be hard to find a more succinct and unapologetic blueprint for Republican success in the conservative era. “Positive polarization” helped the Republicans win one election after another—and insured that American politics would be an ugly, unredeemed business for decades to come.

Perlstein argues that the politics of “Nixonland” will endure for at least another generation. On his final page, he writes, “Do Americans not hate each other enough to fantasize about killing one another, in cold blood, over political and cultural disagreements? It would be hard to argue they do not.” Yet the polarization of America, which we now call the “culture wars,” has been dissipating for a long time. Because we can’t anticipate what ideas and language will dominate the next cycle of American politics, the previous era’s key words—“élite,” “mainstream,” “real,” “values,” “patriotic,” “snob,” “liberal”—seem as potent as ever. Indeed, they have shown up in the current campaign: North Carolina and Mississippi Republicans have produced ads linking local Democrats to Jeremiah Wright, Barack Obama’s controversial former pastor. The right-wing group Citizens United has said that it will run ads portraying Obama as yet another “limousine liberal.” But these are the spasms of nerve endings in an organism that’s brain-dead. Among Republicans, there is no energy, no fresh thinking, no ability to capture the concerns and feelings of millions of people…

And today

Another sample:

In its final year, the Bush Administration is seen by many conservatives (along with seventy per cent of Americans) to be a failure. Among true believers, there are two explanations of why this happened and what it portends. One is the purist version: Bush expanded the size of government and created huge deficits; allowed Republicans in Congress to fatten lobbyists and stuff budgets full of earmarks; tried to foist democracy on a Muslim country; failed to secure the border; and thus won the justified wrath of the American people. This account—shared by Pat Buchanan, the columnist George F. Will, and many Republicans in Congress—has the appeal of asking relatively little of conservatives. They need only to repent of their sins, rid themselves of the neoconservatives who had agitated for the Iraq invasion, and return to first principles. Buchanan said, “The conservatives need to, in Maoist terms, go back to Yenan.”

The second version—call it reformist—is more painful, because it’s based on the recognition that, though Bush’s fatal incompetence and Rove’s shortsighted tactics hastened the conservative movement’s demise, they didn’t cause it. In this view, conservatism has a more serious problem than self-betrayal: a doctrinaire failure to adapt to new circumstances, new problems. Instead of heading back to Yenan to regroup, conservatives will have to spend some years or even decades wandering across a bleak political landscape of losing campaigns and rebranding efforts and earnest policy retreats, much as liberals did after 1968, before they can hope to reestablish dominance…

When I met David Brooks in Washington, he was even more scathing than Frum. Brooks had moved through every important conservative publication—National Review, the Wall Street Journal editorial page, the Washington Times, the Weekly Standard—“and now I feel estranged,” he said. “I just don’t feel it’s exciting, I don’t feel it’s true, fundamentally true.” In the eighties, when he was a young movement journalist, the attacks on regulation and the Soviet Union seemed “true.” Now most conservatives seem incapable of even acknowledging the central issues of our moment: wage stagnation, inequality, health care, global warming. They are stuck in the past, in the dogma of limited government. Perhaps for that reason, Brooks left movement journalism and, in 2003, became a moderately conservative columnist for the Times. “American conservatives had one defeat, in 2006, but it wasn’t a big one,” he said. “The big defeat is probably coming, and then the thinking will happen. I have not yet seen the major think tanks reorient themselves, and I don’t know if they can.” He added, “You go to Capitol Hill—Republican senators know they’re fucked. They have that sense. But they don’t know what to do. There’s a hunger for new policy ideas.”…

Do read the whole essay.



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5 Responses to this post.

  1. Funny that Arts and Letters, would carry such a piece, since it’s so sympathetic to neoconservatism.

    I always thought the conservative coalition, of business and religious interests were fragile.

    The real reason for their death agony, is they have no program, to deal with war, the economy, racism, sexism etc.

    I believe the US Republican Party is dead, for years to come.

    Regards.

  2. Not so odd it should be in the New Yorker, I suppose, and A&L does quite often follow that source; I agree A&L is more often right than left, and does ignore quite a number of more radical publications, but at times they do point to interesting things and do cover a range of subjects that interest me.

  3. Posted by Trevor Khan on May 23, 2008 at 7:52 am

    Neil,

    I could not let your article go unchallenged.

    With the greatest of respect (and I do have enormous respect for you), it seems all too often people mistake labels for substance. We have seen elected a very conservative Labor administration, lead by Kevin Rudd, and it is said there is a “fall of Conservatism”?

    We have just seen a budget surplus delivered of $20 Billlion and the Treasurer is crowing his economic conservatism. We have legislation in Canberra that would have allowed gay couples to perform a “ceremony” to mark the union, and what do we see? We see the ACT legislation under threat from an apparently progressive Federal Labor.

    Then we could turn to Labor in NSW. We have the Iemma Government selling electricity assets contrary to the wishes of State Conference. We have legislation constantly introduced in the name of “law and order”. We have a trearurer who prides himself in being a climate change sceptic and spends a good deal of his time bashing the Greens…..

    Neil, I could go on, but one could well argue that the conservatives have supplanted the progressives.

    In the meantime, below is a response to George Packer by Yuval Levin. The article appears at URL:

    http://www.commentarymagazine.com/viewarticle.cfm/not-quite-dead-11387

    Not Quite Dead
    Yuval Levin

    George Packer of The New Yorker has penned the latest in a long line (reaching back many decades) of obituaries for conservatism. Like so many in the genre, it consists of a description of a movement in the midst of intellectual turmoil, searching for ways to apply its basic insights about government, human nature, and the culture to changing times, and it takes this turmoil to be a sign of decay or self-destruction. Packer discusses some of the younger conservatives (he mentions Ramesh Ponnuru, Ross Douthat, and Reihan Salam, among other examples) who are working to apply conservative principles and insights to the moment we’re living in, and yet he takes these signs, too, to suggest only gloom and doom for the Right. He points to intellectual fatigue (a phrase he quotes me using in the piece) but not to promising signs of resurgence and revitalization.

    Let me suggest two things he might have noted. First of all, the kind of intellectual turmoil and self-searching he cites would be almost unimaginable on the left, today or at most points in the past half century. Conservatism is an intellectual movement in a way that American liberalism generally hasn’t been. For a long time, American liberals could draw their ideas from the European Left, and from the socialist experiment. The fall of communism—which certainly ended an era for the Right, and left many conservatives searching for a clear purpose—was far more of a challenge to the Left, and one the left has yet to recover from, or even fully engage. Clintonian triangulation helped pass the time for a while in the 90’s, and anti-Bushism has helped since, but what is the worldview underlying Obama’s and Clinton’s platforms today? The relative absence of heated arguments about that question on the left is not a sign of strength.

    Second, he might note the character of the Democratic resurgence in Congress, evident in 2006 and in the much-discussed triad of Republican defeats this year. The general pattern suggests a concerted effort by the Democrats to recruit socially conservative but economically populist candidates to run against Republicans. This is a smart tactic for building strength in Congress (engineered largely by Rahm Emmanuel, a former Clinton lieutenant) but it is hardly a sign of strength for the Left (which has come to define itself first and foremost in cultural terms in recent years), or of weakness for conservatism. Democrat Travis Childers, who won a once-secure Republican seat in Mississippi last week, took every possible opportunity to describe himself as “pro-life and pro-gun” and to distance himself from Barack Obama. What so many are (so annoyingly) calling the Republican “brand” is indeed in trouble, for a variety of reasons, related especially to voter concerns about competence. But the Democrats’ effort to capitalize on this opportunity has involved making the Congressional Democratic party more, not less, conservative. And when Republicans finally wake up, their response will be to become more conservative too, especially on fiscal matters. If that’s a fall, let’s start falling.

    There is no question that American conservatism is trying to retool and redirect itself to new challenges; and this process is messy and in many respects quite unpleasant. It will also take time. But to mistake these efforts for a fall is to reveal a preference for cohesion over substance. A preference for cohesion is certainly one problem the American right has never suffered from—but it’s far from clear that this is such a bad thing, or that conservatism is doomed. Cheer up.

  4. Ditto with your introductory remarks, Trevor.

    It depends what you mean by… etc. Thanks for drawing our attention to the counter-article by Yuval Levin.

    Despite the correctness of your characterising current Labor as conservative in many respects, I do think it is fair to say that the distinction between what we had in Canberra between 1996 and last year and what is emerging now is still very significant, even if Kevin Rudd is more conservative than you on the issue we have discussed before — gay marriage. The clique who captured the ear of government, or reflected the views of government, during the Howard years do seem to be somewhat lonely and exposed nowadays, and a damned good thing that is for my blood pressure. ;) It is also true that conversations with US conservatives lead us Aussies into very weird territory again and again, or so I have found. We were heading down that track, and have pulled back, thank God.

    Equally, I would grant that the ultra-left is a sect, or series of sects, with few supporters today.

  5. The Yuval Levin piece does point out an important counter to the big Republican ‘worry’ that they will be devoid of political life for the next few elections. That is, the seat in Mississippi, MS-01, with a ranking of R+10, which George Bush carried with 66% (or 62%, I can’t quite remember) of the vote last election, went Democrat because they trotted out a rather conservative candidate. It was the only option for them if they wanted to win the seat. Combine this with, as I see it, the immediate backlash that the Republicans are going to feel come this election, and the seat went blue.

    But I don’t think this necessarily means conservatism is on the decline in the U.S. as much as it seems to be on the decline here. Over there, where elections are won and lost by getting independent and swing voters out to vote, here it is compulsory. So while you’ll see huge turnouts come this election in the U.S., it’s because the voters are motivated to get out, and a lot will be as a backlash directly against the Bush government, not necessarily against conservatives in general. That is while you’ll still see a proportion of people vote John McCain in those states that are swing states (Iowa, Missouri, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Florida) – they still feel that the situation the U.S. faces is best handled by a conservative government. Watch, and I expect the polls will continue to say that a conservative government better handles terrorism and defense – two areas that have been mishandled of late. And it’s also why you will see Senate and House seats stay Republican in a lot of cases. The most realistic scenario is that the Democrats pick up 5 Senate seats – with 23 up for grabs. An anti-conservative move would surely see Democrats pick up just 5 seats.

    In Australia, because of compulsory voting, a majority of people went to the polls and voted Labor not because they were inspired to get out and vote, but rather as a backlash against conservative politics on certain issues. Here you saw WorkChoices, environment, indigenous issues, and education get made into election-winning issues – and all areas that the conservative government appeared to neglect (well, went too far in the case of WorkChoices). Yet polls still indicated that voters thought the conservative government could handle the economy better.

    What am I trying to say? Well, it’s that in the U.S., George Bush *specifically* has been tied to his failures, and not conservatives in general. In Australia, the conservatives have been tied to Australia’s problems, not any one person. I think it comes down to the different in system – that you can vote against Bush, but for your local Republican candidate. Now, with the coming election, McCain is being tied to Bush, and here is the chance for Democrats, independents, and ticked-off Republicans to lodge their anti-Bush displeasure, even though Bush isn’t even in the election. In Australia, you couldn’t vote against Howard unless you lived in Bennelong, so there was a nation-wide move against conservatives. Whether it will be sustained or not, I guess it comes down to how well Rudd & Co. do their job.

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