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Tony Blankley
Tony Blankley
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To Conservatives Who Are Thinking About Tomorrow

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Bring me my Bow of burning gold:

Bring me my Arrows of desire:

Bring me my Spear: O clouds unfold!

Bring me my Chariot of fire.

I will not cease from Mental Fight,

Nor shall my Sword sleep in my hand

Till we have built Jerusalem

In England's green & pleasant Land.

In regard to attitude, America's conservatives could do worse than to be moved by those lines of William Blake from another place and another time on behalf of a similar sacred cause then not yet realized.

Conservatism always has been and always will be a force to reckon with because it most closely approximates the reality of the human condition, based, as it is, on the cumulative judgment and experience of a people. It is the heir, not the apostate, to the accumulated wisdom, morality and faith of the people.

As a force in electoral politics in any given season, conservatism, like all ideas and causes, is hostage to the effectiveness of the party that carries its banner, the candidates and leaders who articulate its principles and programs, and the engagement and spirit of the people who are its natural adherents.

A dispassionate critique of the performance of each of those elements would have to conclude that the core of the conservative people — our natural adherents — were inflamed with both passion and knowledge of conservative principles. It was the party and the candidates, leaders and conspicuous advocates (with some honorable exceptions) who failed both in their visions and their performances a cause that yearned to be well-led.

But fate (if you are a classicist) or the mystery of God (if you are religious) also has played its part this season. Only once since FDR-Truman has the American electorate elected the same party to the White House three times in a row (Reagan, Reagan, Bush — 1980-1992). And by the way, only once since 1896, when Grover Cleveland declined to run for re-election and William McKinley won, has the American voter not elected the same party to the White House at least twice in a row (Carter, Reagan — 1976-1980).

Moreover, the Republican Party, our reluctant champion, naturally (if, in a few instances, unfairly) was held to account for two unpopular wars, manifest corruption and managerial incompetence, a collapsed housing market that resulted in a 20-50 percent crash in the home values for most Americans, and a financial crisis that threatens world prosperity and has reduced the value of the average American's stock portfolio by about 40 percent.

But as someone who has been banging around American politics since the Goldwater glory and defeat of 1964, I need to observe that the first explanation of losing causes and losing parties (liberals and conservatives, Democrats and Republicans) almost invariably is to blame incompetent candidates, ineffective messages, and overwhelming events.

At a technical level, that is often true.

But at a deeper, historical level, the failure was that the cause was not yet ready to lead. We conservatives were not ready to lead in 1964. By 1980 and 1994, under Reagan and Gingrich, we had figured out how to talk to a majority of the country with both principles and programs that gained a majority endorsement. We no longer were just standing on our high horse declaiming to a nation. We were on the ground, with the people, leading them into the citadel of power.

At a practical level, it is worth considering how Benjamin Disraeli reformed the modern British Conservative Party in the 19th century. (For a fuller account, see David Gelernter's Feb. 7, 2005, article in The Weekly Standard, "The Inventor of Modern Conservatism.")

Disraeli envisioned the Conservative Party as the true national party, while the Whigs were merely the party of intellectual ideas. In that time, English intellectuals and progressives were fascinated with German ideas, just as today Democrats are enchanted with European ideas. Disraeli judged: "In a progressive country, change is constant; and the great question is not whether you should resist change, which is inevitable, but whether that change should be carried out in deference to the manners, the customs, the laws and the traditions of the people or in deference to abstract principles and arbitrary and general doctrines." By championing the vote for the people in a century in which that was inevitable, Disraeli formed a conservative party that dominated British politics for 150 years.

Today there are certain profound values — free markets and respect for life — that are renounced at the price of our soul. Free markets, particularly, are under the immediate, explicit assault of the next government. Life may be undermined more surreptitiously.

But as a national cause championed by a national party, a conservative agenda must, for example, learn to speak persuasively to a near majority of Hispanic-Americans, or we will be merely a debating society. When Texas joins states such as Colorado, New Mexico (and even North Carolina, Virginia, Arizona and Florida), where Hispanic votes are necessary for victory, there is no possibility of national governance without finding that voice.

Our challenge is not to retreat to the comfort of self-congratulatory exile but to sweat and bleed — and be victorious — in the arena of public opinion.

Tony Blankley is executive vice president of Edelman public relations in Washington. E-mail him at TonyBlankley@gmail.com. To find out more about Tony Blankley and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com.

COPYRIGHT 2008 CREATORS SYNDICATE INC.


Comments

7 Comments | Post Comment
The opening quote is by William Blake, not Robert Blake. Determination alone will achieve little. It must be joined by a total rethink and restatement of conservative principles, and an unshakeable pledge to adhere to them when in office in future. Reform of the electoral process, specially ending vote fraud, and placing sensible restrictions on media bias in the weeks before an election will also ensure that yesterday's debacle is not repeated.
Comment: #1
Posted by: pageonedaily
Wed Nov 5, 2008 5:27 AM
The reason McCain lost the election, is because he is not a conservative by any means imaginable. McCain drove many conservatives, like me, for example, from the Republican party. What was left to vote for him were Republicans; Republicans who, like their democrat counterparts, decided to be lemmings and vote the party line rather than to think for themselves and reject the RINO who thumbed his nose at conservative principles all these years, and then tried to pretend to be a conservative to get the conservative vote. We true conservatives saw through the transparency that is John McCain, and said, "No way will we reward this lying, scheming, pal of Teddy Kennedy and Hillary Clinton and Joe Leiberman with the presidency he so desperately wants." The Republican party's nomination of such a turncoat RINO like McCain signaled loud and clear the fact that the Republican party is NO LONGER the party of conservatives. Conservatives don't want amnesty for 20 million illegal aliens, like John McCain does. And he lies when he says he's now for border security first; lies to fool some of the people all of the time. And does any conservative out there trust this RINO to have appointed pro-life judges? Please. This is the guy that, in 2004, considered leaving the Republican party and becoming a democrat, AND John Kerry's running mate. No, the main reason for John McCain losing the election is because he could not corral the votes of TRUE conservatives. Don't label yourself conservative just because you're a Republican. They are two completely different things now.
Comment: #2
Posted by: James4551
Wed Nov 5, 2008 2:24 PM
Sir; properly speaking, the world is made up of forces and reactions... You might see that best by looking at structural engineering where the force of gravity is met by the reaction of a column.... In social reality, progress is the force, the natural condition of mankind, striving, advancing, achieving; and the reaction is to hang onto the past until ones grip is pried off with a bar... People hang on to the past because they are naturally fearful of the future... What does the future bring us eventually, but death, old age, and taxes??? We have no reason to seek the progress of life, and only admit it is all there is, and that we must either ride change, or be ridden by it... Those who have reason to feel contented at this moment, who have their millions, or their political power react against the needs people feel for change to better their condition, to provide for their futures with hard work and ambition... Those who cannot live with the present are hard up against those who like the present just like it is....And, the reaction has the advantage, again, because we all have something about the past that we would carry forward, and that is our lives, our memories, and our hopes... No; you must understand what is happening here... The natural inclination of people is being used against them when it is not at all in their interest... Some people benefit from the past, and most are injured by it... No one lives in the past but the dead... The past is a battlefield of waste and want... It is the vultures of life who never want to turn the page, who see in the death and destruction of the human spirit a well laid out buffet... It does not matter what people need, or how natural is change, or how much change is the same as life itself... All that matters is that those who have it, no matter how they got it, want it forever and ever and ever... They are not a force, but a reaction....Thanks...Sweeney
Comment: #3
Posted by: James A, Sweeney
Wed Nov 5, 2008 4:31 PM
Re: James4551; Sir, Some times in life you have to stand with those who will stand with you... What does it tell you if the reactionaries of the right are leaving you behind??? Hurry now, and catch up... America by a slim margin has bet on the future, and no one living lives in the past... If that is where you want to be, go to the grave yard, and dig a hole, lay you down, and pull the dirt in after, for the past lies under every stone. ... If you ever see a dead body, in their hands will always be a piece of past they have always seized... Join the living, let go of the past, look to the future with unclouded vision for in that direction awaits your life... Thanks...Sweeney
Comment: #4
Posted by: James A, Sweeney
Wed Nov 5, 2008 4:54 PM
Re: pageonedaily, Sir;.. Do you not get it??? The past was changed to make a fraction of a percent of super rich... The past was changed to make a vast number of hopeless poor... If we do not change that fact, if we can achieve no economic equity we will not have any part of our democracy... Are you a social conservative, or a fiscal conservative??? There is only one kind of true conservative in this country, and they look back to our founding values of liberty and justice for all, which are revolutionary values to day as they were revolutionary values then... All those who call themselves conservatives who seek to limit freedom or abuse people of their justice are reactionaries, enemies of liberty, justice, and conservatism... They want change... They want to turn back the hands of time even if they have to break the clock of human progress...These reactionaries are the enemies of mankind, and not even good friends to themselves because they put their heads in the noose just to have what is ours, and that is our futures, which none can live without...We will own the future, or we will die trying... Reaction is cutting too many people out of their lives no matter what name it travels under... The past is death... Reach for a new future we can all share...Thanks...Sweeney
Comment: #5
Posted by: James A, Sweeney
Wed Nov 5, 2008 5:17 PM
Mr. Sweeney, I can assure you that I have never lived in the past, nor do I fear the future. Death, old age and taxes have never consumed my thoughts. I am the eternal optimist, and I actually think that Obama will be a much better president than McCain could ever be, even though I voted for the true conservative, Bob Barr. However, the values by which I live my life, I won't compromise, nor is it likely to occur to me that your values are superior to mine at any point in time.

If McCain represents the future for you, you'd better check your hand for signs of decay, and also see if you can figure out what you're holding in that hand.
Comment: #6
Posted by: James4551
Wed Nov 5, 2008 5:33 PM
Re: James4551;... Your values is only another word for ideals, and I am not surprised that you live your life by them and won't compromise... How can you??? Your values are how you see life... It is your lens... You look through your lens and everything makes sense... Some people have the lens of party... Some people have the lens of religion... Some people have the lens of morality...There are a lot of lenses out there, and it takes a step into the unknown to see through new lenses, and see beyond them, and see around them... But think... When you see through your lense does it not make some people look good, and others evil??? Does it not make some people look white and others black??? Even if you understand that people are people, and all endowed, so to speak; still your values color them... Now, I don't know what to tell you.... These forms, as these moral concepts are, are hard to live without... I am not certain we can live entirely without forms... But I think we want to be able to see the human being regardless of the form, and as much as is possible, to be in-form-al....Try to consider that your form, your values, are only as good as they are useful... Sure, truth is how well your form fits to reality, but that is difficult to determine when talking about moral forms.... It may be a difficult thought to accept, but I think it is essential... Humanity advances, progresses by a changes of forms, and it is because humanity is essentially beyond change... If you think about it, humanity has always had the same basic needs, and always had needs, that our values help to supply, or do not... And that is the purpose of things like government and economy: to supply needs... But what can anyone do when the form gets in the way of supplying needs??? As Jefferson suggests, people don't easily change forms, but when they must, they must... Insight might make you reconsider your forms, your values before dire necessity does the same; but for most, nothing short of dire need will make them change a form to which they are accustomed...Whether people want to admit that they need an entirely new form of relationship, or not, reality knows what they do not, and will tell them often that things are not working as they must... Look at how many are happy with the form of our government.... Try to see life through other people's values; but mostly try to see what your values are, because understanding the thing will help you make the thing better if that becomes necessary...Thanks...Sweeney
Comment: #7
Posted by: James A, Sweeney
Fri Nov 7, 2008 6:26 PM
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