Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Would conservati­sm’s godfather approve of Trump?

- Chris Vognar Chris Vognar is a freelance writer who writes frequently for the New York Times.

William F. Buckley Jr., widely considered the godfather of modern conservati­sm, defended Joseph McCarthy and his communist witch hunts. He praised the “restraint” of Alabama law enforcemen­t officers who brutally assaulted civil rights marchers on the Edmund Pettus Bridge in 1965. He was also a silver-tongued intellectu­al who abhorred boorish thinking and behavior and savored debates with the sharpest minds of his era.

Such a track record invites the question asked in a new “American Masters” documentar­y “The Incomparab­le Mr. Buckley,” streaming on PBS.org: What would Buckley think of the current Republican kingpin, Donald Trump, and his followers?

Buckley and Trump

“I don’t equate Trumpism with conservati­sm,” said his son, the novelist and former George H. W. Bush speechwrit­er Christophe­r Buckley. “I’m very glad my father and Ronald Reagan are not alive to see what’s happened to the GOP and to the national discourse.”

Others say it’s not that straightfo­rward. “My own view is that Buckley would probably think about Trump more or less what he thought about McCarthy,” Beverly Gage, a history professor at Yale University, said in a video interview. “He would see Trump as tremendous­ly useful as a concentrat­ion of many of the themes and constituen­cies that Buckley stood for.”

The son of an oil speculator who made his fortune in Mexico under dictator Victoriano Huerta, Buckley was rigorously home-schooled before he went to Yale. There he fashioned himself into an anti-establishm­ent conservati­ve intellectu­al.

His first book, “God and Man at Yale” (1951), took his alma mater to task for propagatin­g atheistic liberal thought. His second book, “McCarthy and His Enemies” (1954, written with L. Brent Bozell Jr.), offered a defense of McCarthyis­m as a patriotic necessity.

His profile kept rising as he founded National Review in 1955 and became a guiding light for burgeoning conservati­ve groups like Young Americans for Freedom, founded in 1960 during a meeting at Buckley’s home.

Before Buckley, “there were a bunch of different ideas and different factions that were critics of liberalism, which was the dominant philosophy, a belief that government could solve problems,” said Barak Goodman, director of “The Incomparab­le Mr. Buckley.” “But there was never a figure that could galvanize these disparate factions into one movement.”

Charismati­c and visionary

Not until Buckley, anyway. “Not only did he have the charisma, talent, and energy to do it,” Goodman said, “he had the vision and he had the intellectu­al chops to be able to create something coherent out of this and then to excite people and to bring them into one tent.”

History doesn’t smile upon Buckley’s more extreme views. “Go back and look at Buckley’s civil rights record,” Gage said. “If you are a believer in human equality and in racial justice, it’s not a good record.”

In a 1957 National Review editorial titled “Why the South Must Prevail,” he essentiall­y argued in support of racial segregatio­n, positing that Southern Black Americans had not earned the right to vote. (He was also known to argue that many white people hadn’t earned that right, either.)

His views on race softened over the years, at least in public, but in 1965, eight years after that National Review essay, he was praising the patience of those police officers in Selma at a New York policemen’s Communion breakfast. (Buckley claimed his remarks had been misreprese­nted.)

As is explained in the film, he was a firm believer in the idea of a ruling “remnant,” a class of people like himself who he believed were naturally inclined to lead the less refined masses.

Possessed of twinkling eyes, quick wit, and a wide, crooked smile, Buckley became the erudite symbol of his cause, especially once he launched his PBS debate series, “Firing Line,” in 1966.

“He rendered palatable a set of authoritar­ian ideas that cultured people didn’t want to see themselves entertaini­ng,” historian and author Rick Perlstein, who appears in the film and has chronicled the conservati­ve movement in books including “Before the Storm” and “Nixonland,” said in a video interview.

Some suggest Buckley’s status as the creator of modern conservati­sm is exaggerate­d. “I think that’s kind of self-congratula­tion,” Perlstein said. “If you look at the conservati­ve manifesto that a bunch of Republican and Democrat members of Congress signed in the 1930s, it’s all there. But he marketed it. He made it something that could appear in The New York Times or on PBS.”

Buckley’s legacy

During his 1965 New York mayoral campaign, he also recognized the importance of the blue-collar conservati­ve voting bloc that helped propel Richard Nixon to the presidency in 1968, though Buckley wasn’t much of a Nixon fan.

He found his true conservati­ve white knight in Ronald Reagan and worked tirelessly to get the former California governor elected to the White House. “If you influence things enough to bring about the election of your designated champion, I think you can claim a very large legacy,” Christophe­r Buckley said.

Does the younger Buckley think the film accurately captures his father? “I think it was very fair, or as they say over at a certain network, fair and balanced,” he said. “It made me very proud of my old man.”

 ?? ABC via Getty Images ?? William F. Buckley Jr. in 2004
ABC via Getty Images William F. Buckley Jr. in 2004

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