The Anglo-Americans
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KEVIN WILLIAMSON
Daniel Hannan, member of the European Parliament and longtime friend of
National Review, pronounces the word “democracy” unlike any American
politician — and it is not his English accent. American politicians of
the Left use “democracy” in the vaguest possible way, as a catch-all for
all things good in politics, even the un-democratic and anti-democratic
ones. Politicians of the Right use “democracy” with some skepticism,
having been taught to emphasize the fact that the United States is a
republic, not a democracy, the latter being something that the Founders
feared and dreaded and pronounced themselves opposed to even as they
crafted the greatest set of democratic institutions known to man.
(Daniel Hannan might disagree, but only a little.)
Democracy, properly understood, is not the American form of government,
but an aspect of the American form of government, one that we
conservatives sometimes undervalue. Many of us agree with F. A. Hayek’s
declaration that he would prefer a liberal (we might say “libertarian”)
dictator to an illiberal democratic government, assuming that this
libertarian dictator (what an idea) would be something like an Antonin
Scalia, hewing as closely as possible to the letter of the Constitution —
except for all the messy voting bits.
One of the great differences
between conservatives and progressives is that conservatives will
sometimes say out loud that there is such a thing as too much democracy.
Progressives believe there is sometimes too much democracy, too, for
instance when the demos prefers policies other than those the
progressives want it to prefer, but saying as much in public has been
out of fashion since approximately the Wilson administration.
Hannan pronounces the word “democracy” with a certain specific kind of
authority, that of a British patriot who lost his democracy to the
planners and schemers in Brussels and who subsequently played an
irreplaceable role in the campaign to win it back. On Thursday evening,
the National Review Institute awarded Hannan the inaugural Whittaker
Chambers Award for his role in persuading the United Kingdom to vote to
leave the European Union. We honor Chambers as a writer, a thinker, and
an advocate; it is appropriate that his great literary achievement — one
of the great American books — is titled “Witness.” That is what
Chambers was. Hannan is a witness, too, but one of a distinctly
different kind. Where Chambers was gloomy and tortured, Hannan is
confident. Chambers believed that when he abandoned the worldwide
Communist enterprise for the cause of liberty, he was joining the losing
side. Hannan confesses to having his doubts about the outcome of the
Brexit referendum, but he does not seem very much like a man who has
ever been on the losing side of anything.
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Hannan received his award at the National Review Institute’s Ideas
Summit, a biannual event at which we conservatives gather to reconsider
our assumptions. It says something about conservatives that we have
these soul-searching sessions after the Democrats win a big election —
and after the Republicans win one, too. Some of us have learned, and
some of us are learning, to moderate our expectations.
This is of course an odd moment for the conservative movement. We
gathered in Washington to, among other things, celebrate the memory of
William F. Buckley Jr. and to . . . confirm our detestation of big-city,
East Coast, Ivy League elitism. WFB was an unlikely populist, a
harpsichord-playing yachtsman who split his time between Park Avenue and
the Connecticut shore, whose first book was an indictment of Yale’s
failing to live up to its own standards. But he was a kind of populist,
too, even if you take as obvious hyperbole his famous declaration that
he’d rather be governed by the first 2,000 people in the Boston
telephone directory than by the faculty of Harvard. (I wonder whether
Maryanne O. Aa of Boston gets many inquiries about this.) But I do not
think that his populism is the kind of populism we are hearing a great
deal about right now. WFB objected to the corruption and incompetence of
our elites, not to their existence. “It is not a sign of arrogance for
the king to rule,” he wrote. “That is what he is there for.”
Hannan, too, is kind of populist, a leading figure in a populist
political campaign. An American friend sent him a note during the
referendum that read: “We voted ‘Leave’ in 1776, and it worked out
okay.” There is something to that. My colleague Rick Brookhiser gave a
talk the next evening at Mount Vernon, and he spent some time on the
more important difference between George Washington’s revolution and the
French one that Thomas Jefferson and his party so admired. The American
patriots, like Hannan’s colleagues in Brexit, were not fighting for
something new so much as they were fighting for something old, something
that had been lost, “something precious,” as Brookhiser put it. The
American revolutionaries were mainly republicans, but they were not
motivated mainly by anti-monarchism. Most of them would have been
content with an English king if that English king had respected their
rights as Englishmen. What they detected under the government of King
George III was an apparatus of oppression and a design for the same. It
was a revolution that was simultaneously a restoration.
In 2009, I attended one of the early tea-party rallies, about which I
had mixed feelings:
I believe the tea-party movement is a healthy and worthwhile
development. But is it conservative? It is good for the people to
sometimes shake their fists at The Man, and The Man should take it
seriously. Politics necessitates compromise, but I wonder if the people
at the Tea Party want the same things, or want enough of the same things
to cohere, and to cohere in a movement that is recognizably
conservative. And if they do want enough of the same things, I wonder
what those things are — because I was there, and I am not sure.
I am even less sure today, as that populism has come into its own as a
genuine political movement on the right. The National Review Institute’s
convention not only was civil, as Rich Lowry assured us it would be in
his opening remarks (the most uncivil person I encountered was myself,
but, like the lust-dogged Jimmy Carter, I sinned only in my heart) but
also remarkably open, honest, and engaged. There was very little in the
way of boring, predictable political speechifying, even from politicos
such as Kellyanne Conway and Paul Ryan, from whom such politician-y
behavior might reasonably be both expected and forgiven.
But there was much that was said, honestly and in good faith, that left
me increasingly convinced that the current expression of populism —
Trump populism, in short — is simply incompatible with a politics based
on property rights, individual liberty, and the traditional moral and
social order and the hierarchies that sustain it. There is more to
conservatism than free trade, but the argument for free trade contains
within it practically the whole of conservative economic thinking and a
great deal of conservative thinking beyond economics: facing reality,
making choices, enduring the consequences, accepting tradeoffs,
accepting responsibility. The right to trade is implicit in the right to
own (and hence to control) property. A right to trade that exists at
the sufferance of the sovereign is not an unalienable right with which
we are endowed by our Creator. It is something else, and something less.
There is more to conservatism than free trade, but the argument for
free trade contains within it practically the whole of conservative
economic thinking and a great deal of conservative thinking beyond
economics.
In his speech, Hannan said that one of the desirable outcomes of Brexit
would be that with the United Kingdom once again in control of its own
trade policy, it would have the opportunity to establish free trade
relations with the United States in a trade pact based “on mutual
product recognition rather than common standards,” meaning roughly that
if you can legally sell it in London, you can legally sell it on the
same terms in Los Angeles, irrespective of differences in tax policy,
environmental standards, labor arrangements, or the like. This is part
of what Hannan (and Frédéric Bastiat and others before him) describe as
elevating the consumer interest over the producer interest — or, in more
explicitly political terms, elevating the general welfare over
special-interest demands. That idea is practically heresy in
conservative circles at the moment, with the Right obsessed with the
idea that low wages and lax regulation abroad cause hardworking
Americans to be cheated out of their livelihoods by the Chinese and
Mexicans . . . and Japanese, and Germans, and Dutch, and Canadians.
No, that does not make much sense, but populism has a way of
transcending ordinary good sense. In the NRI Summit’s opening session,
Heather Higgins answered concerns about Donald Trump’s character
(remember how conservatives used to go on and on about character?) with
assurances that he has “good relations with his wives,” plural. Heads
nodded. What the words “good relations with his wives” might hope to
mean outside the context of a polygamous society is not entirely clear
to me. I had been under the impression that the word for “good
relations” with the mother of one’s children is “marriage.” If you are
curious about the compatibility of Trump-era populism with what we
sometimes call “social conservatism” (which is more properly known as
conservatism), consider that, or consider how a proposal to restrict the
general availability of no-fault divorce would be received in 2017.
I had that in mind while David French, J. D. Vance, and I were
discussing the politics of class in the United States, particularly as
it relates to the dysfunctional and downwardly mobile people we
euphemistically call the “white working class,” which is white but isn’t
working. French is hopeful about the role of churches in restoring
order to the family, which — if our populist friends will forgive the
reference to someone who was both an elitist intellectual and Chinese —
Confucius argued was necessary to order in the kingdom. I would make a
pretty poor Puritan, but I found myself wishing for a visit from
Jonathan Edwards — and not the one with the hair and the mistresses.
We are always fighting the French Revolution, in one form or
another.
“Anglo-American” is a term with a long history. It used to mean “white
people,” and before that it meant “white people who aren’t Jews,
Italians, or Irish,” back before those groups were assimilated into
American whiteness. We use it now mainly to mean something different,
something related to Winston Churchill’s “English-speaking peoples.” It
describes a way of political life that is rooted not in Anglo-Saxon
ethnicity but in the thinking and habits that informed the
English-speaking world from Magna Carta (which was sealed at Runnymede,
in Daniel Hannan’s constituency) to the Bill of Rights, and which
informs the best political traditions not only in the United States,
United Kingdom, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand but also in places
everywhere from India to Jamaica. It contains much: property rights, the
rights to speak and publish and worship, the right to criticize the
government and petition it for changes. It also contains the right to go
one’s own way, because while Anglo-American liberalism is not a
philosophy by or for an atomistic society populated exclusively by
variation on homo economicus, it is a philosophy that puts at its center
the smallest minority — the individual, and his rights, and his
responsibilities.
Populism takes a different view: At the center of its concerns is the
people — or, increasingly, the People. If populism meant only being good
at the real-world application of democratic politics, that would be
only an acknowledgment of the political reality that you have to win to
govern. But it is not that. It is rather the latest reincarnation of
Jean-Jacques Rousseau’s “general will,” that nebulous motive that is the
will of the People as interpreted by men with power, as opposed to the
will of the People as revealed by what the People do when left to make
their own choices and to bear the responsibility for those choices. We
are always fighting the French Revolution, in one form or another.
The fundamentally irresponsible nature of the general will is one of
the reasons we have a representative form of government rather than a
strictly democratic one.
The fundamentally irresponsible nature of the general will is one of the
reasons we have a representative form of government rather than a
strictly democratic one. But representation itself is held in some
suspicion by the populists. If you ask someone, “What ought
Representative Smith to do about this problem?” the answer you will
usually get is: “He ought to do whatever his constituents want him to
do, whatever the People want him to do.”
But that is exactly wrong: What he ought to do is not what the People
want, but what is best for them: If there were no difference, then the
representative would not be necessary — and neither would the
Constitution. In reality, neither the emancipation of slaves in the 19th
century nor freedom of speech in the 21st century would have survived a
plebiscite. Neither would free trade, if we held the vote tomorrow,
because the general will demands protection from a government that is,
in John Kasich’s ghastly phrase, “America’s Dad.” It is strange that in
the case of political representation, trusteeship is considered by so
many condescending, whereas outright patronage is not considered
patronizing.
The current strain of populism on the Right often speaks in terms of
restoration of the constitutional order, but its heart is in the New
Deal, which anybody who ever has tried to touch Social Security has
found out the hard way. There has been a restoration of one of the
cardinal features of Anglo-American liberalism in Dan Hannan’s United
Kingdom, or there is at the very least one under way as the Brexiters
lead the country back toward democracy and national sovereignty — which
in the end are, as Hannan argues, the same. On this side of the
Atlantic, where some — some — conservatives have been experiencing an
odd bout of Jacobin-envy, things are a little different, as I suspect
the first Englishman who shows up here with an offer of genuinely free
trade among the English-speaking peoples will learn to his dismay.
Daniel Hannan was among friends, as, indeed, were we all. (I can share
these thoughts among friends, since it is just us.) American
conservatives love Daniel Hannan. But what about the Anglo-American
tradition for which he stands, with its free trade, its free enterprise,
its confidence, its generosity of spirit — and its limits on what
demands We the People might make and expect to be satisfied? How much
Rousseau has seeped into those offices decorated with Churchill busts? I
was there, and I am not sure.
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