Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Rush’s legacy will live on

- HENRY OLSEN

Rush Limbaugh, who died Wednesday of complicati­ons from cancer at age 70, was one of the most important media figures of the past quarter-century. Setting aside his conservati­ve ideology for a moment, he singlehand­edly re-invented how radio was used to discuss politics.

Before Limbaugh, radio personalit­ies were almost entirely disc jockeys known for their banter while spinning tunes. After Limbaugh, the radio star was a political maestro, promulgati­ng his or her views on truth, justice and the American way for millions of devoted listeners.

He discovered that many people didn’t want their politics served nicely on a china platter, with a smattering of ideologica­l courses for edified sampling. They wanted the political equivalent of backyard barbecue, served smoking hot straight from the grill with the chef’s heavy sauces.

The fact that Limbaugh’s opinions were uniformly conservati­ve was also revolution­ary. Conservati­ve opinion writers were well-establishe­d by the 1970s and 1980s, but virtually no television or radio personalit­y could be said to be firmly on the right.

Television’s most famous personalit­ies were the anchors of the then-dominant nightly news programs whose authority always came from a serious, cautious demeanor rather than colorful opinions.

Neverthele­ss, Limbaugh’s unabashed conservati­sm made him the first conservati­ve mass media hero. His radio show went national in mid1988. By 1990, he was syndicated in hundreds of markets. By 1992, he had authored a best-selling book and was the host of a daily television show.

By 1994, the shocking Republican takeover of the U.S. House—the first time the GOP had won control of that chamber since 1952—made him a political superstar. The Republican freshman class thought him so important to their victory that they made him an honorary member.

His influence changed conservati­sm too. Along with his pugnacious Republican comrade in arms, the Georgia U.S. representa­tive and later House speaker Newt Gingrich, Limbaugh’s no-holds-barred assault on liberal verities fueled conservati­sm’s confrontat­ional and often angry modern tone. Tens of millions of ordinary Americans loved their country just the way it was, and Limbaugh told them they were right to think that and right to be angry at the people who wanted it to change.

Limbaugh was not merely reactionar­y, but he did prioritize conservati­sm’s innate opposition to change over Ronald Reagan’s focus on building a conservati­ve “shining city on a hill.” Limbaugh may have honored the 40th president, labeling him “Ronaldus Magnus,” but under his tutelage, conservati­sm became more defined by what it was against than what it was for.

Thirty-five years ago, Republican­s in California’s state Senate reportedly tried to recruit the then-local radio personalit­y to run for a competitiv­e Sacramento-area seat. Limbaugh’s decision to decline that request allowed him to influence countless more legislator­s than he could ever have done in office.

RIP, Rush. Your legacy lives on.

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