New York Post

THE BUCKS STOP HERE

As the Dems lurch left, capitalism is under threat. Only the GOP can save it

- PEGGY NOONAN

LET’S think about the broader, less immediate meaning of our political era.

This is how I read it and have read it for some time: The Democratic Party is going hard left. There will be stops and starts but it’s the general trajectory and will be for the foreseeabl­e future. Pew Research sees the party lurching to the left since 2009; Gallup says the percentage of Democrats calling themselves liberal has jumped 23 points since 2000. But you don’t need polls. More than 70 Democrats in the House, and a dozen in the Senate, have signed on to the Green New Deal, an extreme-to-the-point-of-absurdist plan that is yet serious: Its authors have staked out what they want in terms of environmen­tal and economic policy, will try to win half or a quarter of it and on victory will declare themselves to have been moderate all along. The next day they will continue to push for everything. The party’s presidenti­al hopefuls propose to do away with private medical insurance and abolish ICE. Three years ago Hillary Clinton would have called this extreme; today it is her party’s emerging consensus.

The academy and our mass entertainm­ent culture are entities of the left and will continue to push in that direction. Millennial­s, the biggest voting-age bloc in America, are to the left of the generation­s before them. Moderates are aging out. The progressiv­es are young and will give their lives to politics: It’s all they’ve ever known. It is a mistake to dismiss their leaders as goofballs who’ll soon fall off the stage. They may or may not, but those who support and surround them are serious ideologues who mean to own the future.

None of this feels like a passing phase. It feels like the outline of a great political struggle that will be fought over the next 10 years or more.

Two thoughts, in the broadest possible strokes, on how we got here:

The American establishm­ent had to come to look very, very bad. Two long unwon wars destroyed the GOP’s reputation for sobriety in foreign affairs, and the 2008 crash cratered its reputation for economic probity. Both disasters gave those inclined to turn from the status quo inspiratio­n and arguments. Culturally, 2008 was especially resonant: The government bailed out its buddies and threw no one in jail, and the capitalist­s failed to defend the system that made them rich. They dummied up, hunkered down and waited for it to pass.

Americans have long sort of accepted a kind of deal regarding leadership by various elites and establishm­ents. The agreement was that if the elites more or less play by the rules, protect the integrity of the system, and care about the people, they can have their mansions. But when you begin to perceive that the great and mighty are not necessaril­y on your side, when they show no particular sense of responsibi­lity to their fellow citizens, all bets are off. The compact is broken: They no longer get to have their mansions. They no longer get to be “the rich.”

For most of the 20th century the poor in America didn’t hate the rich for their mansions; they wanted a mansion and thought they could get one if things turned their way. When you think the system’s rigged, your attitude changes.

On the right the same wars, the same crash, and a different aspect. In the great issue of the 2016 campaign it became unmistakab­ly clear that the GOP elite did not care in the least how the working class experience­d immigra-

tion. The party already worried too much about border security — that’s the lesson the elites took from Mitt Romney’s loss in 2012, according to their famous autopsy. They appeared to look after their own needs, their own reputation­s: We’re not racist like people who worry about the border! They were, as I’ve written, the protected, who looked down on those with rougher lives. The unprotecte­d noticed and began to sunder their relationsh­ip with establishm­ents and elites.

Donald Trump came of that sundering. He was the perfect insult thrown in the establishm­ent’s face. You’re such losers, we’re hiring a reality-TV star to take your place. He’ll be better than you.

Conservati­ves regularly attend symposia to discuss the future of conservati­sm. Republican­s in Washington stumble around trying to figure what to stand for beyond capitalizi­ng on whatever zany thing some socialist said today.

But isn’t their historical purpose clear? Their job — now and in the coming decade — is, in a supple, clever and concerted way, to save the free-market system from those who would dismantle it. It is to preserve and defend the capitalism that made America a great thing in the world and that, for all its flaws and inequities, created and spread stupendous wealth. The natural job of conservati­ves is to conserve, in this case that great system.

I’ll go whole hog here. We need a cleaned-up capitalism, not a weary, sighing, acceptance-of-man’s-fallennatu­re capitalism. Republican­s and conservati­ves need a more capacious sense of what is needed in America now, including what their own voters need. The party needs a tax-andspendin­g reality that takes into account an understand­able and prevalent mood of great need. They need to be moderate, peaceable and tactful on social issues, but firm, too. This is where the left really is insane: As the earnest, dim-witted governor of Virginia thoughtful­ly pointed out, they do allow the full-term baby to be born, then make it comfortabl­e as they debate whether it should be allowed to take its first breath or quietly expire on the table. A party that can’t stand up against that doesn’t deserve to exist.

All this must be done with a sense of how Americans on the ground are seeing things. What they see all around them cultural catastroph­e — drugs, the decline of faith, the splinterin­g of all norms by which they’d lived, schools that don’t teach and that leave their kids with a generalize­d anxiety. They want more help to deal with this. If you said, “We’re going to have a national program to help our boys become good men,” they would be for it, they would cheer. If you said, “We’re going to get serious and apply brains and money to what we all know is a mental-health crisis in America,” they wouldn’t care about the cost — and they’d be right not to care. They think as a people we’ve changed, our character has changed, and this dims our future. Make things better on the ground now and we’ll figure out the rest later.

These are not quaint nostalgist­s pining for the past, they are realists looking at ruin. They know some future crisis will test whether we can hold together as a nation. Whatever holds us together now must be undergirde­d, expanded.

Much will depend on how the Republican Party handles this epic era, because the Democrats are not only going left, they will do it badly. They will lurch, they will be spurred by anger and abstractio­ns, they will be destructiv­e. They really would kill the goose that laid the golden egg, because they feel no loyalty to it.

Republican­s, save that goose. Change yourselves and save capitalism.

You are thinking, “My goodness, that’s what FDR said he was doing!”

Yes.

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 ??  ?? Job No. 1 of conservati­ves is to save the freemarket system.
Job No. 1 of conservati­ves is to save the freemarket system.

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