The unfailing reverence on the American right for Ronald Reagan is understandable. He was the only exemplar of modern conservatism to win the White House, and unlike liberal icons such as Roosevelt or Johnson or Obama, he presided over an economic boom and became beloved by voters not normally drawn to his party. No wonder that Reagan, long before his death in 2004, attained mythical status in the conservative movement and the Republican Party. But that myth has become a burden for the modern GOP. It has bound Reagans followers on the right to policies and positions that were time-specific. The old guard has become convinced that Reagans solutions to the problems of his time were the essence of conservatism not simply conservative ideas appropriate for that era.
Todays Republican Party, however, faces legions of voters and candidates who came of age politically after Reagans eight years in office. An entire generation recalls him vaguely as a genial, optimistic president who stood up for America in the Cold War.
The Republican Party can remain a Ronald Reagan historical society, or it can try to endure as a force in national politics. But it cant do both. The choice matters greatly, for there is no guarantee that the GOP will retain its ability to win national elections or that conservatism has a future as a national governing philosophy.
The Republican Party may survive, but only if its politicians, activists, donors and intellectuals rethink modern conservatism and find new issues to defend and new arguments with which to defend them. The public face of the GOP can no longer be aging, ill-tempered Reaganites such as John McCain and Jim DeMint but must give way to a diverse, media-savvy generation that understands the America we actually live in. Only then can the essence of conservatism the promotion of personal liberty survive, and the GOP along with it.
Were winning everything imaginable in off-years, Republican National Committee Chairman Reince Priebus told me recently. The governors are still going strong. Were winning the war in issue-driven races. However, he conceded that Republicans have lost their ability to connect with average Americans in the wider electorate: We are not relating to people at an emotional level.
The 2012 presidential election should have been an opportunity to make that connection. The party seemed to have everything it needed in its nominee: an intelligent and experienced candidate with a tax-cutting agenda, a defense of traditional values, a commitment to maintain U.S. supremacy in the world and an adoring wife, too. Unfortunately, Mitt Romney seemed to be campaigning for the 1980 election, with attacks on welfare recipients and promises of greater defense spending and getting government off our backs.
In the months since Romneys defeat, there has been a great deal of angst about the partys future. Some Republicans, such as Karl Rove and his American Crossroads super PAC, are certain that the GOP has a personnel problem and are determined to weed out self-destructive candidates. But the problems are more serious than simply who is winning primary races. This is not a matter of individually competent candidates but of the GOPs outdated worldview.
Poster Comment:
Jennifer Rubin is a jew's jew, a radical neocon whore, so bear that in mind while reading this.