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POLITICS: “Compassionate Conservatism” Is Not a Lost Cause
By Jeffrey M. Jones
President Bush’s signature domestic issue
remains relevant to the hopes of both ordinary Americans and Republican
candidates. By Jeffrey M. Jones.
Government cannot solve every problem, but it can
encourage people and communities to help themselves and to help one
another. Often the truest kind of compassion is to help citizens build
lives of their own. I call my philosophy and approach “compassionate
conservatism.” It is compassionate to actively help our fellow
citizens in need. It is conservative to insist on responsibility and on
results. And with this hopeful approach, we can make a real difference in
people’s lives.
—President George W. Bush, April 2002
Compassionate conservatism was a hallmark of George W.
Bush’s campaign for president, and it became an important motivator
of national and international policy in his first six years in office.
Shortly after the November 7, 2006, congressional
elections, a commentator for the conservative magazine Human Events lamented,
“Compassionate conservatism failed America and cost Republicans
control.” Other traditional conservatives, libertarians, and even
some Democrats would make similar arguments, as the nation took stock of
the dramatic shift in power that gave both houses of Congress to the
blue-state party.
How much of the loss can rightly be pinned on
compassionate conservatism? Were the American voters really rejecting
Bush’s political philosophy, or were they rebuking his policy
choices? Can the two even be separated? Answering these questions is
critically important, both for how the president should govern in his final
two years and for what role, if any, compassionate conservatism should play
in the campaign to elect his successor.
The Origins of Compassionate Conservatism
The perception that Bush created compassionate
conservatism is only half-right. What Bush did was to take an obscure
theory and make it a household phrase.
The origins of this political philosophy date back to
at least 1992, when journalist and professor Marvin Olasky wrote The Tragedy of American Compassion, which critiqued the welfare state as a misguided and harmful
government monopoly of aid to the poor. It argued for a return to the
pre-twentieth-century system of private and religious charity whereby
individuals and local communities met the needs of the poor while holding
them accountable. Olasky followed up with Renewing
American Compassion in 1996 and Compassionate Conservatism in
2000, the latter, notably, with a foreword by George W. Bush.
“According to the principles of compassionate
conservatism, government has a responsibility, not to redistribute the
wealth of citizens, but to provide the underprivileged with skills and
opportunities to create their own wealth.” So wrote Stephen
Goldsmith, former mayor of Indianapolis, who, along with other big-city
mayors and governors, championed this approach. Compassionate conservatives
differentiated themselves from traditional and cultural conservatives by
making concern for the poor a central focus, instead of business, taxes,
military strength, family values, or antiliberalism. Not that such values
were in conflict with the principles of compassion, but they often left no
room for a clear and consistent conservative message on poverty. Thus
Republican policies toward the poor had come to be portrayed, in Senator
Daniel Patrick Moynihan’s words, as benign neglect.
Compassionate conservatism then began to emerge as a
legitimate political system for dealing with a wide range of social ills.
Its method and appeal are hinted at in a speech given by then-governor Bush
on the campaign trail in 2000:
I am convinced a conservative philosophy is a
compassionate philosophy that frees individuals to achieve their highest
potential. It is conservative to cut taxes and compassionate to give people
more money to spend. It is conservative to insist upon local control of
schools and high standards and results; it is compassionate to make sure
every child learns to read and no one is left behind. It is conservative to
reform the welfare system by insisting on work; it’s compassionate to
free people from dependency on government.
COMPASSION IN Government
Reflecting recently in the Wall Street Journal on the role
of compassionate conservatism in American politics, Michael Gerson, a
former Bush presidential speechwriter, said, “I think it’s a
political truth that one reason we won the 2000 election was that
Republicans finally had a message on education and welfare.”
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Compassionate conservatives differentiated themselves from traditional and cultural conservatives by making concern for the poor a central focus.
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Newly elected President Bush began implementing his
compassionate agenda right away. One of his first political acts was an
executive order implementing his Faith-Based Initiative. Opening up federal
grant money to religious organizations and treating them fairly was key to
a new governing approach that sought to leverage the best private
resources, regardless of church ties, to improve lives. The Office of
Faith-Based and Community Initiatives within the White House was to be a
hub that ensured that compassionate conservatism remained central to policy
positions advocated by the administration.
Largely presented as a domestic agenda, many of the
president’s signature programs can be tied to compassionate
conservatism, notably the No Child Left Behind Act of 2001. From its
primary emphasis on educating low-achieving children to its insistence on
accountability and testing, NCLB was the poster child for how Bush sought
to meld compassion with public policy. But it was also a very large,
expensive, and intrusive federally led effort, albeit implemented at the
local level. NCLB revealed the Bush White House’s penchant for
promoting compassionate governance, leaving by the wayside the conservative
values of limiting the federal role and spending less in order to return
more to taxpayers.
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Even now, compassionate conservatism meets Democrats on policy turf historically affiliated with liberals—concern for the poor—and offers a legitimate alternative to government dependence.
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A number of other programs fit what Bush called
“active government to promote self-government,” the aim of
which “is not to spend less money, or more money, but to spend only
on what works.” The Medicare Prescription Drug, Improvement, and
Modernization Act of 2003 sought to give seniors, especially those in need,
more choices and resources to pay for essential medications. Parts of the
president’s tax cuts sought to remove the federal tax burden from
millions of low-income Americans, giving them more control over their
spending. Likewise, Bush put his compassionate stamp on hundreds of social
programs administered through HUD, HHS, and other federal
branches—including the reauthorization of welfare reform with
stronger work requirements, a healthy-marriage initiative, local 10-year
plans to end chronic homelessness, and changes to public-housing priorities
to encourage home ownership.
In the midst of this domestic-policy overhaul, the
September 11 terrorist attacks and subsequent invasions of Afghanistan and
Iraq came to dominate the landscape. While the president’s
compassionate conservative agenda rightfully took a back seat to national
defense, it was clearly not forgotten. Indeed, some have argued, as Gerson
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Mitt Romney, John McCain, Rudolph Giuliani, and Sam Brownback by Taylor Jones for the Hoover Digest.
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did in an interview with Naomi Schaefer Riley, that “the
administration’s foreign policy represents an expansion of the
philosophy of compassionate conservatism.” Certainly many of the
rhetorical reasons given for the continued U.S. presence in Iraq have a
strong compassionate core to them. Besides the safety and security
rationales, the president has consistently emphasized how bringing freedom
and democracy to the Iraqi people will make for a more peaceful,
prosperous, and just society.
The Unraveling of a Grand Experiment?
All this brings us to November 7, 2006, and the
Republican defeat at the hands of a resurgent Democratic Party. Some on the
right believe that Bush’s compassionate conservative policies
alienated a base within the party fed up with his “big
government” approach. Former House majority leader Dick Armey said as
much just before the election, when he suggested that a Republican loss
would be the result of having abandoned the principle of limited government
and embraced government for conservative ends. There’s some
legitimacy in this critique, especially as it touches on increased federal
spending, but it’s a fallacy to pin the blame on compassionate
conservatism, for several reasons.
First, the public’s perception of Bush’s
Iraq war policy—its justification, implementation, and future
resolution—weighed heavy on the minds of voters on election day.
People grow weary of drawn-out wars in faraway places. Although some in the
administration see the effort in Iraq as an extension of compassionate
conservatism, that is a philosophical stretch. It is doubtful anyone would
refer to the original implementers of compassionate conservative policies
as hawks. A better explanation is that whatever mandate Bush had to pursue
his compassionate agenda at home was usurped after September 11 by the
neoconservatives within his administration and used to apply military force
in support of democratic transition abroad.
Second, the president in many respects failed to heed
his own advice to keep spending in check. Bush’s “active
government” actively spent from the federal coffers, and not just on
national security: real nondefense discretionary outlays increased 7.6
percent annually through fiscal year 2006, above Clinton-era levels (4.2
percent annually) and way above the conservative benchmark set by Ronald
Reagan (2.7 percent). It is questionable whether such spending is in line
with compassionate conservatism as originally envisioned. In Stephen
Goldsmith’s words, set forth during Bush’s candidacy for
president,
Fundamentally, compassionate conservatism is a form of
political conservatism. In other words, compassionate conservatives believe
that government should have a limited role in people’s lives and that
competition in the marketplace is the most effective means of producing
social and economic progress. Consequently, compassionate conservatives
believe in low taxes, limited government regulation, and the vast power of
the free-enterprise system.
Third, the midterm elections were not just a backlash
against Bush’s policies. To their credit, the Democrats gained seats
in many districts by putting forth more moderate candidates than they had
before. A New York Times postelection analysis observed that “Democrats have
arguably grown more conservative”:
After two decades of defeats, they have largely
dropped their former calls for major defense spending cuts, talk of
Canadian-style national health insurance, or campaigns for gun control.
They work hard to avoid getting tagged as tax raisers, and since 2004 they
have tried to open their doors to opponents of abortion as well.
This evolution is certainly no repudiation of the
conservative movement or the principles of compassionate conservatism.
Rather, it shows the success of conservative ideals and ideas—if you
can’t beat them, join them.
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Whatever mandate Bush had to pursue his compassionate agenda at home was redirected after September 11.
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A fourth and final caveat in the blame game is a
whistleblower thesis: that the White House deliberately put too little
money and muscle behind Bush’s compassionate conservatism. David Kuo,
a former deputy director of the Office of Faith-Based and Community
Initiatives, argued in 2006 that the faith-based agenda was a political
scam to draw in evangelical voters. His book, Tempting
Faith: An Inside Story of Political Seduction,
presents a picture of cynicism and ridicule toward the compassionate
agenda spearheaded by the faith-based office.
Detractors within the administration have been quick
to dismiss Kuo’s claims, but they leave two points to ponder. First,
if compassionate conservatism was not really a priority within the White
House, then it would be difficult to blame it for Republican losses in
November. Second, it’s possible the lack of follow-through on
compassionate promises kept evangelicals from wholeheartedly supporting
Bush and his party in the 2006 midterm election, costing the Republicans
dearly.
The Future of Compassionate Conservatism
If compassionate conservatism is not to blame for the
Republican loss of the House and Senate, the question remains: does it have
any viable role to play in who becomes our next president? If compassionate
conservatism is rightly understood and passionately articulated, can a
candidate take up its mantle and win?
I believe that compassionate conservatism remains an
intellectually coherent and practically sound political philosophy for
today’s Republican candidates. Its primary appeal has not changed
much since 2000. It meets Democrats on policy turf historically affiliated
with liberal causes—concern for the poor—and offers a
legitimate alternative to the government-provision mindset. As Myron Magnet
of the Manhattan Institute said, “Compassionate conservatism derails
the Democratic Party’s greatest rhetorical advantage, its
demonstrably empty claim of a monopoly on caring about the
worst-off.”
This “take the fight to them” mentality is
crucial because the two main elements of the Republican Party, the economic
libertarians and the social or religious conservatives, are often so
fixated on their own agendas that they end up with no ability to appeal to
moderates in their own party, let alone independents and conservative
Democrats. Compassion for the poor is a unifying value, the kind that
builds majority coalitions.
Yet, if compassionate conservatism were merely a
philosophical idea, a feel-good catchphrase, it would be better to let it
end with the Bush presidency. Fortunately, it has already proven its mettle
in some of the most critical areas of U.S. public policy. Welfare reform
has worked. Not only is it more compassionate to lift families out of their
dependency on government support than to leave them there, pursuing work
over welfare tangibly increases their financial well-being. Likewise, the
ability to choose which school a child attends—whether through
vouchers, charter schools, or transfers within the public education
system—has improved learning, as demonstrated by reform efforts in
Florida. In nearly every state and municipality pursuing school choice, the
animating principle is an interest in (read compassion for) the welfare of
low-income students. Compassionate conservatives also have been leading
advocates for tougher law enforcement and harsher criminal penalties,
knowing that, as Magnet says, “safer neighborhoods [are] the one
thing that most improves the lives of the poor.”
WHERE THE CANDIDATES STAND
So how do the current Republican presidential
candidates line up on compassionate conservativsm? As of this writing, the
potential field is pushing a dozen, so let’s focus on a select group
of front-runners who have already declared their candidacy: former mayor
Rudolph Giuliani, Senator John McCain, Governor Mitt Romney, and Senator
Sam Brownback.
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Many of the initial Bush programs fit the mold of what the president called “active government to promote self-government.” Its aim: “Not to spend less money, or more money, but to spend only on what works.”
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Giuliani is setting himself up as the Reagan
Republican in this election, an advocate for strong defense, low taxes, and
the principles of freedom as played out in health care reform and education
policy. His support of abortion, gun control, and gay rights rule him out
as the favorite candidate of social conservatives, but these issues are not
central to the compassionate conservative agenda. What Giuliani can run on
are his successful efforts to improve the lives of New York City’s
poor through welfare reform and crime reduction, and his own conviction
that conservatives care more for the poor than do liberals because their
policies actually improve lives. Giuliani is well-positioned to rekindle
the original appeal of compassionate conservatism.
McCain and Romney are both serious candidates who so
far have failed to evince serious conviction about the issues central to
compassionate conservatism. McCain lost to Bush when the Texas governor was
the compassionate candidate, and there is little to suggest his priorities
have changed. McCain is spending most of his time appealing to the
social-conservative base he alienated in the last presidential election and
aligning himself with Bush and the few remaining pro-war neoconservatives.
Romney is in a similar position, articulating a staunchly conservative
social agenda that bears little resemblance to his actions as governor of
the blue state of Massachusetts. His compassionate conservative side has
yet to be revealed.
It’s possible that both McCain and Romney are
pursuing campaign strategies that they believe will win them the
nomination—tactics initially focused on the religious base of the
Republican Party.
Brownback is an interesting contrast to the three
others. He has a more authentic social-conservative perspective, but also
has been the most vocal about compassionate conservatism thus far. In
announcing his candidacy, Brownback said, “There is a real need in
our country to rebuild the family and renew our culture, and there is a
need for genuine conservatism and real compassion in the national
discussion.” In addition, he has strongly endorsed programs
(including faith-based ones) to help prisoners reintegrate into society, to
offer international aid to combat HIV/AIDS, and to provide guest-work
programs for immigrants. What remains unclear is whether Brownback’s
compassionate positions are an extension of President’s Bush’s
approach, or a return to the compassionate conservatism that stresses the
free market and limited government.
In all likelihood, one of these candidates will win
the Republican nomination and face a formidable Democratic opponent. We may
have to wait until the two-way race gets under way to fully appreciate the
appeal compassionate conservatism still has for the American voter.
The Bush presidency has certainly elevated
compassionate conservatism to a national level, but this political
philosophy has deeper roots than those tapped so far. The capacity of
Americans to support each other on an individual level, without government
assistance or interference, remains undervalued. The power of faith to move
people both to serve and to be healed of old wounds remains hidden from the
public square. The hope that springs from the release from government
dependency remains unknown to millions of citizens. True compassion awaits
its champion.
Special to the Hoover Digest.
Jeffrey M. Jones is an assistant director and a research fellow at the Hoover Institution.
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