Sen. John McCain's virtually certain victory
in the Republican Party's presidential contest has led to scrutiny of his conservative
credentials. The heated campaign debate between McCain and his former rival
Gov. Mitt Romney about who was a less authentic conservative did more damage
to Romney than to McCain because of McCain's long-standing ability to draw upon
moderate Republicans and independent voters in prior elections and in the primaries.
That aspect of McCain's appeal has raised questions about whether his "straight
talk" reputation for creative dissent amounted to "flip-flopping"
on conservative principles. It made McCain the target of harsh criticism from
talk radio guru Rush Limbaugh and columnist Ann Coulter, both famous for their
flamboyant brand of conservatism. More important, it gave traction to one of
McCain's two remaining challengers in the primaries, Gov. Mike Huckabee, who
is drawing on fundamentalist religious conservatives to win in several solidly
"red" states, mainly in the South. The debate over McCain's conservatism
is part of a broader, older argument among conservatives about what constitutes
conservatism, an argument so heated that The Economist last year characterized
it as a "civil war." The irony of this campaign season is that the
only candidate who has consistently adhered to conservative principles, Rep.
Ron Paul, has been largely ignored.
Paul's authenticity as a conservative is evident in his support for small
government, fiscal and budgetary prudence, and – most obvious, given McCain's
position on national security – for a strict non-interventionist approach to
national defense. This was evident in the Republican presidential candidates'
CNN debate before Super Tuesday. When asked by CNN's Anderson Cooper about whether
the United States is in a recession and whether Americans are "better off
than we were eight years ago," when the Bush administration began, Paul
gave a very conservative answer, which included the
following observations:
"No, no, we're not better off. We're worse off, but it's partially
this administration's fault and it's the Congress. But it also involves an economic
system that we've had for a long time and a monetary system that we've had and
a foreign policy that's coming to an end and we have to admit this. …
"We were elected in the year 2000 to have a humble foreign policy
and not police the world, and yet what are we doing now? We're bogged down in
another war. We're bankrupting our country and we have an empire that we're
trying to defend which costs us $1 trillion a year. …
"But it has to do with a fiscal policy, monetary policy, and foreign
policy of way too much spending, but it took a lot of years for us to get here.
The people in this country have been begging for a change in direction, and
they haven't had it. It's time we gave it to them."
Paul underscored this viewpoint later in the debate:
"We should be debating foreign policy, whether we should have interventionism
or non-interventionism, whether we should be defending this country or whether
we should be the policemen of the world, whether we should be running our empire
or not, and how are we going to have guns and butter?"
Sadly, while Ron Paul has been pointedly critical of the supposedly conservative
candidates' positions on America's geopolitical, fiscal, and societal policies,
his criticism has drawn open scorn from mainstream Republicans. Their smirks
and condescension toward Paul are clearly meant to demonstrate that they are
the real conservatives and he is not. Yet all they have demonstrated is why
and how conservatism has gone astray.
Paul's commitment to constitutionalism, fiscal prudence, federalism, small
government, and avoiding the strategic entanglements that the founding fathers
– especially Washington and Jefferson – warned against makes him the only true
conservative among the Republican presidential aspirants. The fact that he will
not prevail while McCain does should reinvigorate the entire debate over the
meaning of "conservatism."