Dayton Daily News

Nikki Haley picks a worthy fight with anti-capitalist­s

- George F. Will George F. Will writes for The Washington Post.

A sound heard recently on Pennsylvan­ia Avenue was a gauntlet being thrown down by a woman spoiling for a fight. Nikki Haley went on offense in defense of America’s economic system, which she correctly says is inextricab­ly woven into the nation’s system of liberty. Some Democratic presidenti­al aspirants and a portion of the public have been flirting with socialism, and some conspicuou­s Republican­s might as well be while they are promoting “hyphenated capitalism.”

Haley minced no words: “The American system is capitalism.” Although “the Founders never used the word, they gave us capitalism in all but the name,” because capitalism is “another word for freedom. And it springs from America’s most cherished ideals.” The Founders understood something the Supreme Court has forgotten for eight decades: Economic freedom is, like freedom of speech and free

FROM THE RIGHT

exercise of religion, a fundamenta­l right. Capitalism has “lifted up more people, unlocked more progress, and unleashed more prosperity” than any other system, yet “many people avoid saying that word, including some conservati­ves and business leaders.”

“Some conservati­ves,” Haley said, “have turned against the market system. They tell us America needs a ... different kind of capitalism. A hyphenated capitalism. Yet while these critics keep the word capitalism, they lose its meaning. They want to give government more power to make more decisions for businesses and workers. They differ from the socialists only in degree.”

She did not need to specify Florida Republican Sen. Marco Rubio’s aspiration for “common-good capitalism,” or Missouri Republican Sen. Josh Hawley’s even vaguer capitalism that does not encourage “Pelagianis­m” and the “Promethean self.” Really. Such conservati­ves inevitably advocate, in effect, government “industrial policy,” socialism’s essential ingredient.

“Only in a prosperous country like America,” Haley said, “can people be so flippant about capitalism and so naive about socialism.”

The daughter of Indian immigrants, Haley was ambassador to the United Nations in the feisty manner of Daniel Patrick Moynihan and Jeane Kirkpatric­k. Before that she was a resounding­ly successful two-term governor of South Carolina. And before that she was a businesswo­man in Bamberg, South Carolina (population then: 2,500). If a businesswo­man can be 12.

Haley’s mother did what so many immigrants do: She started a business, a retail clothing and gift store. There came a time when her bookkeeper, who was leaving without having found a replacemen­t, asked what she could do. Haley remembers:

“I happened to be walking past at that exact moment. My mom grabbed my arm and said, ‘Train her. She can do it.’ By the time I was 13 I was doing taxes, keeping the ledger, and balancing the expenses and bank account. It wasn’t until I got to college that I realized that wasn’t normal.”

Normal is overrated. Haley is not.

The $20 billion in new capital investment she attracted to South Carolina as governor included five internatio­nal tire companies, and Mercedes, Volvo and BMW plants. The world’s largest BMW plant is one reason why South Carolina builds more cars for export than any other state. Haley is one reason South Carolina has changed more, and more for the better, than any state in the previous 50 years.

Haley spoke at the Hudson Institute, which is at 1201 Pennsylvan­ia Ave. It is about 900 yards from 1600. Anyone’s path to that place is long and circuitous, but one way to begin is by picking a worthy fight.

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