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Read an Excerpt of Joe Scarborough's New Book "The Right Path"

Foreword

“It was invisible, as always. . . . On election day America is Republican until five or six in the evening. It is in the last few hours of the day that working people and their families vote, on the way home from work, or after supper; it is then, at evening, that America goes Democratic if it goes Democratic at all. All of this is invisible, for it is the essence of the act that as it happens it is a mystery in which mil­lions of people fit one fragment of the total secret together, none of them knowing the shape of the whole.”

—­Theodore H. White, The Making of the President 1960

In Theodore White’s now canonical telling of the legend, the sacred democratic ritual begins as silently as snow falling on a serene New England landscape. His beautiful rendering of America’s political system offers a comforting image of a peaceful process that reveals itself to a citizenry that rises the morning after an election to gaze wondrously upon the glorious results of their efforts, like watchful children awakening to winter’s first snowfall. The beauty of the voting booth, seen through the lens of Teddy White’s inspiring works, is how our glorious Republic moves for­ward.

Except when it doesn’t. In those moments when a cultural shift is so sharp and sudden that its impact jars the political class out of a deep slumber, there is nothing gentle, nothing amiable about poli­tics. These moments are more Norman Lear than Norman Rock­well, and the aftershocks seem all the more violent because few ever see a great political unraveling coming until after a Washington co­alition crumbles and consensus disintegrates into cacophony.

This book tells the story of the unexpected rise and self-­inflicted fall of the modern Republican Party, a movement that found a path to power in the middle of the 1960s and went on to dominate Amer­ican life for forty years. With the national Grand Old Party seem­ingly on a glide path to ideological and demographic irrelevance as a presidential force, it’s difficult to remember, but we used to be the ones to beat. From 1968 to 2008, Republicans lost only when Demo­crats took care to sound more conservative than liberal. Between Richard Nixon and Barack Obama, the only Democrats to win the presidency of the United States were two white Southern Baptists who sought office by positioning themselves as nontraditional Dem­ocrats who understood the failings of liberalism and appreciated the virtues of conservatism. Republicans were not beyond the main­stream of American politics. For that forty-­year period, Republicans were the mainstream of American politics.

But as conservatives endure two terms of Barack Obama and face the possibility of eight more years with a Clinton in the White House, all too often these days it’s the Republicans who sound angry, extreme, and too out of touch. If the GOP wants to regain its place as the decisive force in national politics, it needs to reengage with its real legacy, which is one of principled conservatism combined with clear-eyed pragmatism. We Republicans have been at our best when we are true to one of the deepest insights of conservatism: that poli­tics, like mankind itself, isn’t perfectible in a fallen universe. And if we continue to let the perfect become the enemy of the good, then we will continue to dwindle in influence.

The good news is that the GOP’s ongoing decline as a national party is not inevitable. History tells us, actually, that we’re pretty good when the odds are the longest. Republicans emerged from what seemed an invincibly liberal political culture in the middle of what Time founder Henry Luce called the American Century when Lionel Trilling suggested that “in the United States at this time lib­eralism is not only the dominant but even the sole intellectual tradi­tion.” Trilling, one of America’s foremost mid-­century literary critics, dismissed conservative thought as little more than “irritable mental gestures which seek to resemble ideas.” History proved Trill­ing’s quote to be as untimely as the one uttered by a British record executive who told the Beatles’ manager, Brian Epstein, that bands with guitars were on their way out.

Conservatism would ultimately rise, not through “irritable men­tal gestures” or by being nativist or racist or blindly ideological. No, the party succeeded in direct proportion to its respect for overarch­ing ideas about the nation and about the world that had a practical impact on the lives of Americans. Dwight Eisenhower and Ronald Reagan dominated the ideological middle of American thought be­cause these GOP giants won elections by putting principled pragma­tism ahead of reflexive purity.

Note that I say principled pragmatism: like our greatest leaders of any stripe—­Washington, Jefferson, Jackson, Lincoln, TR, FDR, JFK—­Republicans of the modern era, driven by conservatives, reso­nated with a majority of Americans when they demonstrated a gen­uine commitment to the ideas of greater liberty, a restrained state, social order, and strength abroad. These are the key conservative principles that most Americans agree with, have always agreed with, and will agree with in the future. Republicans who try to use the power of the state to interfere in matters of personal liberty will be as doomed as the big-­government Democrats who wanted to use the authority of government to impose a singular “Great Society” on all of America. Conservatives know that the world is made up of what Edmund Burke described as “little platoons”—­the small towns or the city neighborhoods where happiness is pursued.

The right path to power lies in appreciating that politics isn’t a science but an art—­that America has been at her best and will be again when the common wisdom of the people, carefully weighed in the Madisonian scales of the Constitution, has a prime place in the governance of the nation. And history shows that the common wis­dom of the people is essentially conservative in that most people want to find the right balance between freedom and responsibility.

For Eisenhower and Reagan, the two great leaders of the modern Republican Party, restraint both at home and abroad were the philo­sophical foundations of their presidencies. Both saw their first chal­lenge as limiting the federal government’s ever-­expanding reach at home. Ike’s presidency followed twenty years of New Deal activism, while Reagan’s focus was on reversing the more destructive, unin­tended consequences of LBJ’s Great Society. These two Republicans won four landslide victories between them because they were also shrewd enough to yield to immovable political realities that even their landslide victories could not wash away.

General Eisenhower knew that President Eisenhower would have to employ the same principled pragmatism in the White House that served him so well as the Atlantic commander in World War II managing mercurial generals like George Patton and Bernard Montgomery. Unlike most GOP activists in 1952, Eisenhower knew that no conservative president—­no matter his popularity—­would be able to eliminate Social Security and a bevy of other popular New Deal programs. It was a political pragmatism that frustrated conser­vatives like William F. Buckley, Jr., but it was a shrewd approach embraced even by the likes of Margaret Thatcher three decades later during her conservative revolution in the Britain of the late 1970s and 1980s. Though Thatcher remained in a perpetual political war with powerful union leaders and a socialist zeal that had laid waste to England’s economy over a generation, the Iron Lady also knew that Great Britain’s government-­run National Health Service was simply beyond her political reach. So instead of dying a noble politi­cal death before even getting elected, Thatcher instead became the longest-serving prime minister of the twentieth century. As General George Washington learned on Long Island in the momentous sum­mer of 1776, it is sometimes the battles great generals avoid that lead to glorious victories for freedom.

Reagan followed another GOP giant’s mantra—­Teddy ­Roosevelt’s—­by believing America was served best by a commander in chief who spoke softly and carried the big stick of American ­economic and military might. Eisenhower the general and Reagan the “warmonger” ended up being the most successful GOP politi­cians in the party’s 160-­year history while, ironically, presiding over a combined sixteen years that were among the most peaceful in the last American Century. Ike’s restrained foreign policy was under­scored in his farewell address to the nation as the world’s greatest general ominously warned of a burgeoning “military-­industrial complex.”

Ike was the first Republican to run the Oval Office in two decades and held on to the White House for eight years—­crushing all politi­cal comers. Reagan proved his critics wrong by being pragmatic enough to hold on to his conservative base while appealing to enough Democrats and independents to win forty-­nine states in 1984. He managed that improbable feat after raising taxes, taking on Social Security, avoiding abortion battles, and allowing the federal deficit to explode to unprecedented heights. There would be com­promises and deal cutting, dreams deferred and half measures ac­cepted. The greatest conservative icon of the twentieth century knew that mortals must confront the world as it is, not as we wish it to be, if we want to win elections and bring that world closer to our ideal conservative vision.

Politics and governing aren’t for the stupid or the fainthearted. And sustained conservative gains are made when candidates focus less on indulging every whim of their political base and more on what successful Republicans from Eisenhower to Nixon to Reagan focused on: bending the world to overarching conservative purposes rather than obsessing on the twists and turns of any given moment, a scenario all too sadly familiar today.

In this constitutional republic of ours, destiny belongs to leaders who speak out not only against their opponents but who also have the nerve to stand down their most ferocious supporters when the action those supporters crave would clearly prove politically disas­trous. That’s one of the best-­kept secrets of successful statecraft, a secret that largely eluded Democrats in the years between 1968 and 1992, when presidential candidates and party operatives feared star­ing down the most extreme in their midst. As a result of the Demo­cratic Party’s reluctance to face down its own political extremists, the Republican Party became a moderating force to the Democrats’ extreme brand of liberalism, gained control of the contours of po­litical debate, redesigned foreign policy, and reshaped the Supreme Court. To understand the earth-­shifting nature of just this last change, consider this: William Rehnquist would, over this time, move from being called the “Lone Dissenter” to “Mr. Chief Justice.”

The last two decades have been less kind to the GOP. While the right made great gains on talk radio, the Internet, and cable TV, the party has experienced a precipitous fall in national elections. The Republican Party’s nominee has now lost the popular vote against Democratic candidates in five of the last six presidential races. This 180-­degree turn from the twenty years preceding Bill Clinton’s elec­tion means the GOP’s continued march toward obsolescence as a presidential party could cost them more than the White House. It will also tilt a closely divided Supreme Court left on issues like guns, abortion, health care, and federalism. Those who would move the party so far right on social issues that their nominated candidates become unelectable are, to borrow an infamous phrase from the Vietnam War, “destroying the village to save it.”

For Republicans—­and I remain a proudly defiant one—­the way forward begins with a look back. To win the future requires us, in Lincoln’s formulation, to think anew and act anew, but only after we take a deep breath and truly come to terms with how we reached the mountaintop and why we lost our footing. Once we do that, we shall, God willing, save our party—­and our country. This much is clear: both need saving. There is nothing invisible or mysterious about that.

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From the Book, THE RIGHT PATH by Joe Scarborough. Copyright © 2013 by Joe Scarborough. Reprinted by arrangement with Random House.  All rights reserved.