Friday, November 9, 2012
Cameron Smith: A Conservative hoping for change
As pundits across the country sift through the
electoral debris, President Obama’s re-election affords an opportunity for
Republican introspection. The recent election demonstrates that American
political ideologies, cultural demographics, and even the level of political
engagement are transitioning in a way not seen in generations. Conservatives
face the challenge of determining how the principles of limited government,
individual responsibility, strong families, and free markets can regain a
foothold during the change.
Republicans need to be frank about the election
results. Their electorate ran a “moderate” candidate against a President whose
largest policy accomplishments have been poorly received during a period of
lackluster economic performance. Instead of a Reaganesque sweep, Republicans
failed to gain any meaningful traction. In fact they actually lost ground.
Arguing that the President did not win as many electoral votes as he did in
2008 is about as useful as finding a silver lining in being beaten by two
touchdowns instead of three.
Fundraising was not the reason for Republicans’
failure. According to The New York Times, the candidates, national party
committees and primary “super PACs” for Romney and Obama each raised almost $1
billion. Outside spending only added to those numbers.
And while Hurricane Sandy may have impacted Romney’s
momentum, Obama’s handling of the terrorist attacks in Libya, continued
economic challenges and several controversial policy initiatives such as The
Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act continued to provide numerous
opportunities for Romney.
In fact, given the known challenges facing President
Obama, the results of this election may have been determined well before the
so-called “undecideds” cast their votes. Peggy Noonan, a columnist for The Wall
Street Journal and former Reagan speech writer, noted that these results may
have been baked into the cake for some time.
If that is the case, either the conservative message
or the Republican messengers failed to connect with a majority of Americans
well before Election Day. Conservatives point to tomes of historic data and
research to back up their positions: Spending substantially more than government revenues is a bad idea; central
economic planning has rarely produced positive results; and strong two-parent
families that worship regularly produce the best economic and social outcomes
for children. To strengthen that message, the test cases of New York, Illinois
and California give little reason to support any number of their liberal policy
choices nationwide. According to Gallup polling, 75 percent of Americans even
self-identify as conservative or moderate.
In short, Americans have lost faith in conservative
and even constitutional ideals because only a rhetorical difference separates
the so-called conservative messengers from their opponents.
Either the principles upon which this nation was
founded no longer successfully apply to political life in America or
Republicans have failed to faithfully engage them. The evidence seems to
support the latter. Consider just the federal debt. Republicans have refused to
raise taxes while continuing to give their assent to increased spending. Their
concern over the political fallout from actually forcing a reduction of federal
spending to levels that track closer to revenues trumps the constitutional
principle of a limited government. As a result, the political left secures the
programmatic planning and spending it wants without the corresponding
confiscatory tax rates that would cause the electorate to stop it.
Rather than strive for a government limited by
constitutional boundaries, Republicans have unsuccessfully attempted to control
an unbridled leviathan for their own ends. Simply waving the Constitution and
parading its forgotten words will do little to change that reality.
The message of returning to constitutional
principles is not broken, it is not out of touch and it has a timeless
practicality. Unfortunately, many Republicans have asked Americans to support
those principles while simultaneously failing to practice them. In order to
introduce a meaningful alternative to modern politics, Republicans must refocus
on the tested ideas that guided America for generations and be willing to
pledge their lives, fortunes and sacred honor to see them to fruition.
About the author: Cameron Smith is General Counsel
and Policy Director for the Alabama Policy Institute, a non-partisan,
non-profit research and education organization dedicated to the preservation of
free markets, limited government and strong families, which are indispensable
to a prosperous society.
This article was published by the Alabama Policy
Institute.
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