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Conservative is not Republican

I can’t tell for sure if Josh Treviño is quoting Christopher Buckley approvingly or not, but in case he is, I take exception with this statement:

“While I regret this development, I am not in mourning, for I no longer have any clear idea what, exactly, the modern conservative movement stands for. Eight years of ‘conservative’ government has brought us a doubled national debt, ruinous expansion of entitlement programs, bridges to nowhere, poster boy Jack Abramoff and an ill-premised, ill-waged war conducted by politicians of breathtaking arrogance.”

Anyone who would call the Bush administration eight years of conservative government I think is playing fast and loose with definitions. Especially for the Bush/Daschle/Hastert years, but also for the Bush/Lott-Frist/Hastert years, I don’t see conservative control of government there.

Can anyone point to me how any of the above listed men (President Bush, Senators Daschle, Lott, and Frist, and Speaker Hastert) have any ties to the conservative movement in any form? What did they do, or write, or say, that connected them with us before taking office, or while they were in office?

If one wants to question one’s ties to the Republican Party, I can be sympathetic. I’ve sure done that enough from time to time, even though I’m currently convinced that conservatives are best served by fighting hard within the party and for the coalition. But I don’t see how the conservaitve movement, as fragmented as it always has been, is represented by what goes on in Washington.

And of all people, Christopher Buckley should know that. If he doesn’t, he should try to step back and look on his family history, as so many of us not named Buckley have, and see how conservatives have often been less than fully at ease or welcomed into the party. There’s a reason that Christopher’s own uncle James was once elected United States Senator from New York on the Conservative party line, defeating Republican incumbent and Governor Rockefeller appointee Charles Goodell, after all.

The fact that the younger Buckley is so seemingly ignorant of the histories of the movement and the party, or willing to ignore them for the sake of endorsing Barack Obama, is such a disappointment for someone who trades on his father’s name.

COMMENTS

  • ZootSuit

    For at least the last seven-and-a-half years we conservatives have cheered just about everything the supposedly “conservative” Bush Administration has done. The only exceptions have been amnesty and possibly the Harriett Miers nomination. And the reason I say “possibly” in regards to the Harriett Miers nomination is because I fear that if had not been found that she gave a few hundred dollars to a pro-choice organization something like twenty years ago, I fear she may have actually made it to the High Court.

    Truth be known, despite all of our very legitimate quarrels with John McCain, he has been more conservative than George W. Bush. At least McCain had the sense enough to argue for a surge in 2003 — instead of “supporting Rumsfeld” and following lockstep behind his failed strategy — and was against the Medicare Part D boondoggle.

    I’m with you but let’s be honest. It is because of us conservatives that most people think George Bush was one of us and everything he did — again, with the possible exception of amnesty — was conservative. But can we conservatives even now admit that George W.Bush was a lousy President?

    And that is why Barack Obama leads in all the polls!

  • Neil_Stevens
  • Jaded

    Two totally different thoughts on government! Just ask the Republican President George W. Bush.

  • Neil_Stevens

    Party’s always been a coalition. Hence you had Helms opposing Reagan in ’76 for picking a unity VP.

  • gamecock

    5

  • tcgeol

    I’m not familiar with Christopher Buckley like I was with his father, but he sounded like a man with no strong principles at all. It sounds like he wants to be in the cool crowd now.

    No conservative could refuse to vote for McCain solely because his demeanor had changed during the election, and then vote for Obama in hopes that he won’t do what he says he will do. That is just stupid and an embarrassment to his father’s memory.

  • JLenardDetroit

    Not me… I wanted him to SHUT DOWN GOVERNMENT over Budgets, even while the Afghan war was on. Once Iraq started, it was already obvious he wasn’t going to fight Spending, so I just bit my tongue knowing it would be worse with a Democrat Pres./Congress (AND NOW THAT DAY MAY COME)!