William Tell
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Libertarians shouldn’t fall into Huckabee and Santorum’s trap
Read more at http://rare.us/story/libertarians-s...kabee-and-santorums-trap/#5G6Wu7zhWxJRupC7.99[h=1]Libertarians shouldn’t fall into Huckabee and Santorum’s trap[/h]
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W. James Antle III, Rare Contributor
Posted on January 6, 2015 9:54 am
AP/Getty
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Mike Huckabee is taking the first steps toward a second Republican presidential campaign.
The first time around, the former Arkansas governor rode socially conservative evangelicals to victory in Iowa and a near-win in South Carolina. He lost the nomination, but won a Fox News show. Huckabee, a former Baptist preacher, has been a leading Christian right figure since the early 1990s.
Since Huckabee’s first presidential campaign, he has been increasingly critical of libertarians. He said libertarianism is a greater threat to conservatism than liberalism. He has complained that CPAC, the nation’s largest gathering of conservative activists, is too libertarian (a view not likely to be shared by many libertarians).
Huckabee isn’t alone. Fellow social conservative Rick Santorum is no fan of libertarianism either. Santorum dismisses even libertarian-leaning conservative Republicans, saying “the Republican Party is not the Libertarian Party.”
Thanks for clearing that up.
If Huckabee and Santorum both run, they can be counted on to continue the libertarian-baiting. Libertarians will be tempted to respond in kind. Pushing back against the Huckabee-Santorum statist tag team is necessary, but there is one particularly counterproductive way to do it: by framing this as a contest between liberty Republicans and social conservatives.
Libertarians won’t win such a fight, because there are fewer of them than social conservatives inside the GOP. Social conservatives are also already integrated into the party structure, while the liberty movement is really just getting started.
But more importantly, the fight is unnecessary. The aim is to correct false perceptions about libertarianism. Suggesting liberty Republicans are necessarily opposed to social conservatives instead reinforces those perceptions.
Sure, there are libertarians who are hostile to social conservatives. But by and large, those aren’t the libertarians and libertarian-leaners who are getting involved in Republican politics.
Rand Paul, Ron Paul, Justin Amash, Thomas Massie and Andrew Napolitano are all pro-life. So are most of the activists who support them. The most prominent pro-choice libertarian in politics is Gary Johnson, who left the Republican Party for the Libertarian Party.
There are also social conservatives who share Huckabee and Santorum’s preference for big government. But the most socially conservative members of Congress are almost without fail the most economically conservative. The relative social liberals in the party are also generally the least conservative on economics.
That doesn’t mean that there won’t be disagreements. There will also continue to be plenty of libertarians who aren’t at all conservative and work outside of Republican politics. But the liberty movement is trying to move conservative opinion and win Republican primaries.
Neither of those goals can be achieved by waging an unwinnable war against the biggest voting bloc in the GOP. Convincing social conservatives that they would be better served by more liberty than by more government will turn one of libertarianism’s biggest liabilities into a major asset.
Rand Paul won his Republican primary for the Senate with the support of a coalition that stretched from libertarian supporters of his father to socially conservative admirers of Dr. James Dobson. He convinced pro-life activists that the Republican establishment was lying about him being a closet liberal, while still being the most libertarian politician running for statewide office as a major party candidate that year.
Do either libertarians or social conservatives regret their votes?
Contrary to what some argue, this isn’t a departure from his father’s politics. Social conservatives — indeed, the religious right — played a huge role in Ron Paul’s congressional elections. He has championed pro-lifers and home schoolers. The senior Paul has appeared on Pat Robertson’s “700 Club” — and gotten some Robertson supporters to become more libertarian.
In the presidential race in particular, evangelicals can’t win the Republican nomination just with their own niche candidate. Neither can the liberty movement.
Overcoming the Republican establishment, which has prevailed in every nominating contest since 1988, will require a candidate to win broad support among rank-and-file voters to the right of the party bosses.
Changing the debate inside the Republican Party will require people who can talk to the conservative base, not rail against them. Left-libertarians shouldn’t be the face of the liberty movement inside the GOP. People known for quarantining AIDS patients and using the “bully pulpit” against contraception shouldn’t be the most prominent social conservatives.
Leave the debates associated with Huckabee and Santorum in the past. It’s time to focus on the future.
Read more at http://rare.us/story/libertarians-s...kabee-and-santorums-trap/#5G6Wu7zhWxJRupC7.99