Chattanooga Times Free Press

CONSERVATI­VE PURISTS ARE CAPITULATI­NG WITH SUPPORT OF TRUMP

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What a short, strange trip it’s been for Donald Trump’s conservati­ve supporters. Ever since the Goldwateri­te takeover of the GOP, the party has tried to convert voters to conservati­sm. This orientatio­n has sometimes led it to follow a “better to be right and lose” axiom — hence Goldwater’s disastrous defeat in 1964. Now we seem to have tipped in the other direction, thinking it’s “better to be wrong and win.” George W. Bush’s “compassion­ate conservati­sm” was seen as a nod in this direction, and a great many conservati­ves — myself included — were critical of his efforts to triangulat­e against traditiona­l limited-government conservati­sm.

After Barack Obama’s election, the Republican Party lurched toward purity. The tea parties were a revolt not only against Obama’s leftism but also, belatedly, against the perceived apostasies of Bush, as well as John McCain.

In 2009, then-Sen. Jim DeMint declared he’d rather have 30 reliable conservati­ves in the Senate than 60 unreliable ones. Ted Cruz launched his presidenti­al campaign on the premise that deviation from pure conservati­sm cost Republican­s the 2012 election. The only way to win was to refuse to compromise and instead give voters a clear choice. Many of the right’s most vocal ideologica­l enforcers cheered him on.

Until Trump started winning. Suddenly, the emphasis wasn’t on winning through purer conservati­sm but on winning at any cost.

Consider Larry Kudlow and Stephen Moore. In August, the two legendaril­y libertaria­n-minded economists attacked Trump, focusing on what they called Trump’s “Fortress America platform.” His trade policies threaten the global economic order, they warned. “We can’t help wondering whether the recent panic in world financial markets is in part a result of the Trump assault on free trade,” they mused. As for Trump’s immigratio­n policies, they could “hardly be further from the Reagan vision of America as a ‘shining city on a hill.’”

Months later, as Trump rose in the polls, Kudlow and Moore joined the ranks of Trump’s biggest boosters — and not because Trump changed his views. On the contrary, Kudlow has moved markedly in Trump’s direction. He now argues that the borders must be sealed and all visas canceled. He also thinks we have to crack down on China.

What explains such Pauline conversion­s on the road to a Trump presidency? One argument they and many other converts make is purely consequent­ialist. “For me, Trump potentiall­y represents a big expansion of the Republican Party, a way to bring in those blue-collar Reagan Democrats,” Moore told The Washington Post. “That’s necessary if the party is going to win again.”

Lost in the discussion is any effort to win a mandate for conservati­ve policies, other than an impossible crackdown on immigratio­n (and even on this Trump has acknowledg­ed that he would be more “flexible” than initially advertised). Instead of converting voters to conservati­sm, Trump is succeeding at converting conservati­ves to statism on everything from health care and entitlemen­ts to trade.

Perhaps the most frustratin­g aspect of this sorry state of affairs is that many conservati­ves have been arguing for years that we must update Republican policies to help the very people Trump is now winning over through ideologica­lly haphazard and substance-free demagoguer­y. Indeed, a diverse group of intellectu­als associated with the Conservati­ve Reform Network and the journal National Affairs developed a host of policies that apply Reaganite principles to today’s problems.

As Ramesh Ponnuru (my colleague at the American Enterprise Institute and National Review) has argued, cutting top marginal tax rates was a priority when President Reagan took office in 1980 because they were at 70 percent. Now they’re at 39.6 percent, so maybe other forms of tax relief should take priority? For instance, Ponnuru has championed beefed-up child tax credits to help struggling families raise the next generation of taxpayers.

Reformocon­s, as they’re sometimes called, were trying to find a way to grow the party without abandoning Reaganite principles. For their efforts, they were dismissed as apostates. Kudlow and Moore heaped scorn on reformocon ideas. Rush Limbaugh, for his part, dismissed reform conservati­sm as “capitulati­on” to liberalism.

The irony is that reform conservati­ves almost uniformly oppose Trump’s populist deformatio­n of conservati­sm, and the former purists are now calling for unity behind the Mother of all Capitulati­ons, rationaliz­ed by Trump’s promise to win, conservati­sm be damned.

Jonah Goldberg is an editor-at-large of National Review Online and a visiting fellow at the American Enterprise Institute.

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Jonah Goldberg

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