The Trouble Isn’t Liberals. It’s Progressives. By Charles Murray. Wall Street Journal, June 30, 2014.
Murray:
Murray:
Not everyone on the left wants to quash
dissent or indulge President Obama’s abuses of executive power.
Social
conservatives. Libertarians. Country-club conservatives. Tea party
conservatives. Everybody in politics knows that those sets of people who
usually vote Republican cannot be arrayed in a continuum from moderately
conservative to extremely conservative. They are on different political planes.
They usually have just enough in common to vote for the same candidate.
Why
then do we still talk about the left in terms of a continuum from moderately
liberal to extremely liberal? Divisions have been occurring on the left that
mirror the divisions on the right. Different segments of the left are now on
different planes.
A few
weeks ago, I was thrown into a situation where I shared drinks and dinner with
two men who have held high positions in Democratic administrations. Both men
are lifelong liberals. There’s nothing “moderate” about their liberalism. But
as the pleasant evening wore on (we knew that there was no point in trying to
change anyone’s opinion on anything), I was struck by how little their politics
have to do with other elements of the left.
Their
liberalism has nothing in common with the political mind-set that wants
right-of-center speakers kept off college campuses, rationalizes the forced
resignation of a CEO who opposes gay marriage, or thinks George F. Will should
be fired for writing a column disagreeable to that mind-set. It has nothing to
do with executive orders unilaterally disregarding large chunks of legislation
signed into law or with using the IRS as a political weapon. My companions are
on a different political plane from those on the left with that outlook—the
progressive mind-set.
Wait,
doesn’t “progressive” today reflect the spirit of the Progressive Era a century
ago, when the country benefited from the righteous efforts of muckrakers and
others who fought big-city political bosses, attacked business monopolies and
promoted Good Government?
The era
was partly about that. But philosophically, the progressive movement at the
turn of the 20th century had roots in German philosophy (Hegel and Nietzsche
were big favorites) and German public administration (Woodrow Wilson’s open
reverence for Bismarck was typical among progressives). To simplify,
progressive intellectuals were passionate advocates of rule by disinterested
experts led by a strong unifying leader. They were in favor of using the state
to mold social institutions in the interests of the collective. They thought
that individualism and the Constitution were both outmoded.
That’s
not a description that Woodrow Wilson or the other leading progressive
intellectuals would have argued with. They openly said it themselves.
It is
that core philosophy extolling the urge to mold society that still animates
progressives today—a mind-set that produces the shutdown of debate and growing
intolerance that we are witnessing in today’s America. Such thinking on the
left also is behind the rationales for indulging President Obama in his
anti-Constitutional use of executive power. If you want substantiation for what
I’m saying, read Jonah Goldberg’s 2008 book Liberal Fascism, an erudite and closely argued exposition of American progressivism
and its subsequent effects on liberalism. The title is all too accurate.
Here, I
want to make a simple point about millions of people—like my liberal-minded
dinner companions—who regularly vote Democratic and who are caught between a
rock and a hard place.
Along
with its intellectual legacy, the Progressive Era had a political legacy that
corresponds to the liberalism of these millions of Democrats. They think that
an activist federal government is a force for good, approve of the growing
welfare state and hate the idea of publicly agreeing with a Republican about
anything. But they also don’t like the idea of shouting down anyone who
disagrees with them.
They
gave money to the ACLU in 1978 when the organization’s absolutism on free
speech led it to defend the right of neo-Nazis to march in Skokie, Ill. They
still believe that the individual should not be sacrificed to the collective
and that people who achieve honest success should be celebrated for what they
have built. I’m not happy that they like the idea of a “living Constitution”—one
that can be subjected to interpretations according to changing times—but they
still believe in the separation of powers, checks and balances, and the
president’s duty to execute the laws faithfully.
These
Democrats should get exclusive possession of the word “liberal.”
As a
libertarian, I am reluctant to give up the word “liberal.” It used to refer to
laissez-faire economics and limited government. But since libertarians aren’t
ever going to be able to retrieve its original meaning, we should start using “liberal”
to designate the good guys on the left, reserving “progressive” for those who
are enthusiastic about an unrestrained regulatory state, who think it’s just
fine to subordinate the interests of individuals to large social projects, who
cheer the president’s abuse of executive power and who have no problem
rationalizing the stifling of dissent.
Making
a clear distinction between liberals and progressives will help break down a
Manichaean view of politics that afflicts the nation. Too many of us see those
on the other side as not just misguided but evil. The solution is not a
generalized “Can’t we all just get along” non-judgmentalism. Some political
differences are too great for that.
But
liberalism as I want to use the term encompasses a set of views that can be
held by people who care as much about America’s exceptional heritage as I do.
Conservatives’ philosophical separation from that kind of liberalism is not
much wider than the philosophical separation among the various elements of the
right. If people from different political planes on the right can talk to each
other, as they do all the time, so should they be able to talk to people on the
liberal left, if we start making a distinction between liberalism and
progressivism. To make that distinction is not semantic, but a way of
realistically segmenting the alterations to the political landscape that the
past half-century has brought us.