The Oklahoman

Can Weld restore conservati­sm?

- WASHINGTON POST WRITERS GROUP George Will georgewill@ washpost.com

‘This,” exclaimed Margaret Thatcher, thumping Friedrich Hayek’s 500-page tome “The Constituti­on of Liberty” on a table in front of some Conservati­ve Party colleagues, “is what we believe.” It also is what Bill Weld believes, which is why he aspires to be the Libertaria­n Party’s 2020 presidenti­al candidate.

The former twice-elected Republican governor of Massachuse­tts has been visiting Libertaria­n Party state convention­s and will be in New Orleans at the national convention June 30-July 3. There he will try to convince the party, which sometimes is too interested in merely sending a message (liberty is good), to send into the autumn of 2020 a candidate representi­ng what a broad swath of Americans say they favor— limited government, fiscal responsibi­lity, free trade, the rule of law, entitlemen­t realism and other artifacts from the Republican wreckage.

Bill Weld, who at

Harvard majored in classics, took philosophy classes from Robert

Nozick, whose “Anarchy, State and Utopia,” a canonical text of libertaria­nism, argues that “the minimal state is inspiring as well as right.” Weld served in Ronald Reagan’s administra­tion for seven years, five years as U.S. attorney for Massachuse­tts. Next, Weld was head of the Justice Department’s Criminal Division. There he brought from San Francisco, as his replacemen­t in Massachuse­tts, a man “who might be the straightes­t guy I’ve ever met,” Robert Mueller.

Weld’s sandy-reddish hair is still abundant and, at 72, he is eager to build on his 2016 experience as the Libertaria­ns’ vice-presidenti­al nominee. During that campaign, “I carried around with me every day” the 10th Amendment: “The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constituti­on, nor prohibited by it to the states, are reserved to the states respective­ly, or to the people.”

The top of the Libertaria­ns’ 2016 ticket was another ex-governor, New Mexico’s Gary Johnson, who was too interested in marijuana and not interested enough in Syria to recognize the name Aleppo. Weld, however, is ready for prime time.

During a recent breakfast at the Hay-Adams hotel across Lafayette Square from the White House, Weld recalled how as governor he taught agencies not to expect “last year’s appropriat­ion plus 5 percent.” He cut taxes 21 times and raised none. A believer in freedom for what Nozick called “capitalist acts between consenting adults,” Weld says his most satisfying achievemen­t was cutting the 6 percent tax on long-term capital gains by 1 point for each year the asset is held.

If the florid face of today’s snarling GOP wants to be re-nominated, he will be. Five-hundred days into his presidency he had 87 percent approval among Republican­s, 10 points above Ronald Reagan’s rating at 500 days. And in the autumn of 2019, upward of 20 Democratic presidenti­al aspirants might clog the stages at “debates” that could become contests to see who can most arrestingl­y pander to activists — a disproport­ionate slice of the nominating electorate — who are enamored of “Medicare for all,” government-guaranteed jobs, and generally gobs of free stuff (college tuition, etc.).

If in autumn 2020 voters face a second consecutiv­e repulsive choice, there will be running room between the two deplorable­s. Because of its 2016 efforts, the Libertaria­n Party will automatica­lly be on 39 states’ ballots this fall and has a sufficient infantry of volunteers to secure ballot access in another nine. So, if the Libertaria­n Party is willing, 2020’s politics could have an ingredient recently missing from presidenti­al politics: fun. And maybe a serious disruption of the party duopoly that increasing millions find annoying. Stranger things have happened, as a glance across Lafayette Square confirms.

An Ohio man was recently arrested for attacking his roommate with a rolling pin. And I find it amazing that two male roommates actually owned a rolling pin.” Seth Meyers “Late Night with Seth Meyers”

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