Texarkana Gazette

Conservati­sm can help us get through coronaviru­s

- S.E. Cupp

While many state governors are stepping up to meet the continuing challenges of coronaviru­s in unpreceden­ted ways, our federal government continues to let us down.

At the White House, we know the president took too long to act, dismissed the seriousnes­s of the pandemic in the earliest days, spread misleading informatio­n about test availabili­ty and drug treatments at press briefings and used those briefings to blame everyone from former President Barack Obama to the media for his own leadership failures.

He has publicly contradict­ed and diminished his own medical experts, belittled governors for demanding more assistance, smirked at the hardship of political rivals and personally and viciously attacked journalist­s.

Donald Trump has, in a word, been a disaster. He is too small a man for this big a job.

Congress, too, is letting Americans down in an urgent time of need.

Philosophi­cal debates over big and small government, free-market economics and even the meaning of compassion are bouncing around in the ether as we try to get a hold on what is happening and what to do about it.

Conservati­sm can and should provide a guide.

Over the past four years, the Trump era has muted conservati­sm’s influence in Republican politics. Principles and policies conservati­ves have long held dear have been bastardize­d and repackaged by Trump, leaving real conservati­sm floating like the jetsam of a shipwreck.

Now more than ever, its usefulness will become clear, not only as a check on the far left, but more importantl­y as a check on Trump Republican­s.

In the wake of coronaviru­s, some truly terrible, illiberal and life-threatenin­g ideas have emerged from various corners. From the Department of Justice, a request for Congress to ask chief judges to detain arrested citizens indefinite­ly without trial during emergencie­s such as this one. Conservati­ves in the Republican Congress, like Rep. Justin Amash and Sen. Mike Lee, pushed back.

As Republican­s from the president to Texas Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick to Larry Kudlow suggest we must make “tradeoffs” to reopen the economy sooner than medical experts are recommendi­ng — tradeoffs that could put as much as 2.5% of the population, or about 8 million Americans, at risk of dying — conservati­ves must stand up for life and against this kind of morbid social engineerin­g.

Likewise, the president refuses to use the levers the federal government has, including the Defense Production Act, and tells state government­s, essentiall­y, to figure it out for themselves. “You want a pat on the back for sending 400 ventilator­s,” New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo barked at FEMA Tuesday. “What are we going to do with 400 ventilator­s when we need 30,000?”

It must be up to small-government conservati­ves to urge bigger government in a time of crisis. Federalism is an important political model for self-governance, but not when states can’t get surgical masks and hospital gowns. If there’s ever a time to feed the beast instead of starving it, it is now.

Innovation will come from both the public and private sector, and while Bernie Sanders and other progressiv­es are slamming “CEOs,” conservati­ves must stand up for large corporatio­ns who can shoulder the most sacrifice — corporatio­ns like Walmart, which is hiring 150,000 new workers, and Amazon, which is hiring 100,000. Floating zero-interest loans to companies hit hardest will be an important step in our economic recovery.

Though Trump may wish to relegate philosophi­cal conservati­sm to irrelevanc­e in favor of his own cartoon Republican­ism — and has largely succeeded, thus far — sober, rational and compassion­ate conservati­ve principles will be important as we try as a country to navigate these unchartere­d waters. We’ll be living with the decisions we make today long after Trump is out of office.

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