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Why Rush is Wrong

 

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Look at America's public-policy problems, look at voting trends, and it's inescapably obvious that the Republican Party needs to evolve. We need to put free-market health-care reform, not tax cuts, at the core of our economic message. It's health-care costs that are crushing middle-class incomes. Between 2000 and 2006, the amount that employers paid for labor rose substantially. Employees got none of that money; all of it was absorbed by rising health-care costs. Meanwhile, the income-tax cuts offered by Republicans interest fewer and fewer people: before the recession, two thirds of American workers paid more in payroll taxes than in income taxes.

We need to modulate our social conservatism (not jettison—modulate). The GOP will remain a predominantly conservative party and a predominantly pro-life party. But especially on gay-rights issues, the under-30 generation has arrived at a new consensus. Our party seems to be running to govern a country that no longer exists. The rule that both our presidential and vice presidential candidates must always be pro-life has become counterproductive: McCain's only hope of winning the presidency in 2008 was to carry Pennsylvania, and yet Pennsylvania's most successful Republican vote winner, former governor Tom Ridge, was barred from the ticket because he's pro-choice.

We need an environmental message. You don't have to accept Al Gore's predictions of imminent gloom to accept that it cannot be healthy to pump gigatons of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere. We are rightly mistrustful of liberal environmentalist disrespect for property rights. But property owners also care about property values, about conservation, and as a party of property owners we should be taking those values more seriously.

Above all, we need to take governing seriously again. Voters have long associated Democrats with corrupt urban machines, Republicans with personal integrity and fiscal responsibility. Even ultraliberal states like Massachusetts would elect Republican governors like Frank Sargent, Leverett Saltonstall, William Weld and Mitt Romney precisely to keep an austere eye on the depredations of Democratic legislators. After Iraq, Katrina and Harriet Miers, Democrats surged to a five-to-three advantage on the competence and ethics questions. And that was before we put Sarah Palin on our national ticket.

Every day, Rush Limbaugh reassures millions of core Republican voters that no change is needed: if people don't appreciate what we are saying, then say it louder. Isn't that what happened in 1994? Certainly this is a good approach for Rush himself. He claims 20 million listeners per week, and that suffices to make him a very wealthy man. And if another 100 million people cannot stand him, what does he care? What can they do to him other than … not listen? It's not as if they can vote against him.

But they can vote against Republican candidates for Congress. They can vote against Republican nominees for president. And if we allow ourselves to be overidentified with somebody who earns his fortune by giving offense, they will vote against us. Two months into 2009, President Obama and the Democratic Congress have already enacted into law the most ambitious liberal program since the mid-1960s. More, much more is to come. Through this burst of activism, the Republican Party has been flat on its back.

Decisions that will haunt American taxpayers for generations have been made with hardly a debate. The federal government will pay more of the cost for Medicaid, it will expand the SCHIP program for young children, it will borrow trillions of dollars to expand the national debt to levels unseen since WWII. To stem this onrush of disastrous improvisations, conservatives need every resource of mind and heart, every good argument, every creative alternative and every bit of compassionate sympathy for the distress that is pushing Americans in the wrong direction. Instead we are accepting the leadership of a man with an ego-driven agenda of his own, who looms largest when his causes fare worst.

In the days since I stumbled into this controversy, I've received a great deal of e-mail. (Most of it on days when Levin or Hannity or Hugh Hewitt or Limbaugh himself has had something especially disobliging to say about me.) Most of these e-mails say some version of the same thing: if you don't agree with Rush, quit calling yourself a conservative and get out of the Republican Party. There's the perfect culmination of the outlook Rush Limbaugh has taught his fans and followers: we want to transform the party of Lincoln, Eisenhower and Reagan into a party of unanimous dittoheads—and we don't care how much the party has to shrink to do it. That's not the language of politics. It's the language of a cult.

I'm a pretty conservative guy. On most issues, I doubt Limbaugh and I even disagree very much. But the issues on which we do disagree are maybe the most important to the future of the conservative movement and the Republican Party: Should conservatives be trying to provoke or persuade? To narrow our coalition or enlarge it? To enflame or govern? And finally (and above all): to profit—or to serve?

Frum, a resident fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, is editor of NewMajority.com.

© 2009

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Member Comments

  • Posted By: 40YearConservative @ 10/30/2009 9:57:41 PM

    Said the misogynist

  • Posted By: Lothario @ 10/29/2009 2:15:15 PM

    thehappyblowhard:"The status of "Blow Hard" is shifting to the comentators on CNN and MSNBC. A trend sure to continue."

     

    It takes a blowhard to know a blowhard.

     

  • Posted By: thehappyamerican @ 10/29/2009 2:05:37 PM

    Republicans need to resolve to contibute to the campaigns of conservative canditates.
    The status of "Blow Hard" is shifting to the comentators on CNN and MSNBC. A trend sure to continue.
    There is no obligation on the part of any conservative in the RNC or DNC to insult Chritians, gun owners, achievers, Law Enforcement or our armed forces.
    There is no obligation on Liberals to attack these Americans either, but when they are not waging their discrimination campaign against these Americans LIBERALS don't have too much to actually say! They become the Blow Hards pushing americans toward Limbaugh and Fox News, where you can get information without all the crap!

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Reactions to Our Cover Story
ajr4000

"Mr. Frum, you are speaking for millions of Republicans like me who have been alienated by the current GOP. Before 2008, I had never voted for a Democrat for President in my life. This party has to change."

Skogkatt

"The one thing the people like you don't understand about the appeal of Limbaugh and Levin and Savage is that they play to something very basic and germinal in many of us on the Right. The play directly to our frustration and our anger."

From Outside Blogs
National Review

"That Newsweek Cover, with its implication that Limbaugh's critics want him to shut up — or, more to the point, be forcibly shut up — is deeply unfortunate, especially at a time when many liberals are eager to use the government to drive conservative talk off the radio. I hope that Frum does not endorse the sentiment behind this image."

Mother Goose Mouse

"It's high time that a known conservative spoke out against Rush Limbaugh as the de facto leader of the Republican party, and I'm just praying - in my own, godless heathen-like way - that he has big enough balls to stand by his statements and not apologize for them so as to get back in the good graces of Limbaugh and his listeners."