Joseph C. Ben-Ami

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Time for phase two of “Unite the Right”
Thursday, 30 October 2008

Of all the silly ideas to have emerged from the wreckage that has been Canada’s conservative movement for the last 50 years, none has been more damaging for the prospects of conservatism, or more vacuous, than the idea of bifurcation.

For those who don’t know, bifurcation in this context refers to the division of conservatives into separate “fiscal” and “social” camps, and the belief that the objectives of these two camps are not only different from one another, but incompatible.

This idea found its ultimate expression in the elevation of the term “progressive conservative” from party name to political philosophy, a formulation of dubious intellectual integrity, but one clung to by a surprising number of people nonetheless. I still encounter those who, upon revealing themselves conservatives feel the need to qualify their views by offering the disclaimer “but I’m a progressive conservative”. So convoluted has their thinking become that for them, conservatism is, like good scotch or fine cigars, a vice to be tolerated only in moderation.

It took the better part of a decade and three consecutive Liberal majority governments for conservatives to finally come together as political organizations. The time has now come for movement conservatives to follow the example set by the politicians, and to unite – not organizationally, but philosophically – by abandoning the destructive doctrine of bifurcation.

Some will no doubt say that this is impossible. I for one am not so sure.

Consider two of the biggest issues that fiscal and social conservatives have focused on respectively in the last 10 years: deficits and the re-definition of marriage. On the surface at least, these two issues seem completely unrelated, one dealing with public finance, the other dealing with social policy. The discerning observer will note, however, that both find their source in a government that is too expensive to finance comfortably, and so over-reaching that it fancies itself the arbiter of a new moral order.

High spending and high taxes, failing schools, a shortage of doctors and nurses, human rights commissions run amok, family breakdown, the assault on community standards…the list goes on and on. These problems are not isolated from one another; they are symptoms of a government colossus that has become so bloated and so all-powerful that it literally cannot help but interfere in the smallest of decisions that we make on behalf of ourselves and our families, often with disastrous consequences.

Liberal statism is the common foe of both fiscal and social conservatives, as well as traditionalist and libertarian conservatives. Our common goal, therefore, should be to reduce the size of government and restrain its power. Our reasons for wanting to accomplish this may differ, but all are equally valid.

Fiscal conservatives may believe that big government slows economic growth and jeopardizes prosperity; social conservatives may believe that big government undermines family and church; traditionalists might add, as Alexander Solzhenitsyn observed, that the line separating good and evil runs through the heart of every man, and that power concentrated in any individual or group of individuals is, therefore, an invitation to despotism; libertarians may believe that absent a compelling reason otherwise, the sole arbiter of personal behaviour ought to be the individual.

Regardless of what intellectual path we conservatives travel, the point of intersection for all branches of the conservative movement is a shared commitment to small government. Everything flows from there.

Bifurcation enthusiasts will immediately reject this conclusion, particularly as it pertains to social conservatives, arguing that “so-cons” don’t want to limit government, they want to expand it and use its power to impose their moral code on everyone else. Whenever I hear this objection I can’t help but marvel at how little conservatives know about their own political philosophy and, as a consequence, how easily they accept and retreat intellectually before the self-interested weltanschauung of the left.

It may be that social conservatives believe that liberty and democracy are cultural phenomena, and that the preservation of our free and democratic society depends largely on the preservation of that culture, including its traditional moral consensus. But thoughtful social conservatives (alas, there are many who are not) understand that the responsibility to preserve and to promote that moral consensus rests properly with autonomous civil institutions like family and church, not with the state, and that the state should mainly reflect and respect that consensus – not create it – while protecting the right of individuals to dissent.

Thoughtful social conservatives seek to limit the power and scope of the state as a means of safeguarding the influence of these autonomous institutions like church and family, thereby preventing the state from acquiring a monopoly on authority, the necessary precondition for the imposition of any single moral code. This is especially true with regard to the family.

Family is the basic unit of governance, and the principle source of education, in a free and democratic society. It’s where social and cultural procreation takes place, not just physical procreation; where the character of future generations is shaped; where the “habits of the heart”, to use de Tocqueville’s phrase, are formed. All conservatives, including fiscal conservatives, should be concerned with the breakdown of the natural family and the role state interference plays in that breakdown. Strong healthy families are essential to future economic prosperity. Where else but family do children learn the value of hard work, self-discipline, thrift and fiscal responsibility?

On the other hand, social conservatives need to become more active on fiscal policy. They need to understand the relationship between high government spending and high taxes. They need to understand that they have an interest as social conservatives in reducing that spending and cutting those taxes. It’s nice that the government would give allowances to families, but wouldn’t it be better for those families – indeed for everyone – if the cost of living went down as a result of real tax cuts and government reform? After all, what the government gives, the government can take away – especially if you deviate from that newly minted moral code liberals claim to fear, but can’t wait to impose.

So, just as fiscal conservatives have an interest in social conservatives achieving their goals, social conservatives have an interest in fiscal conservatives achieving theirs. Rather than sniping at one another then, each ought to support the aims of the other because, in the end, the success of both is essential to the success of either.

The great conservative commentator Russell Kirk once observed that conservatism is not a single doctrine, or even a set of doctrines. “It emerges naturally from an examination of first principles and an understanding of how we might live to realize those first principles,” he explained. In my view, one of the most important of these is limited government.

It’s time, therefore, for conservatives of all stripes, but especially fiscal and social conservatives, to end our internecine struggles and to work together to capture and cage the raging leviathan. Unless we do this, I fear that all of the effort we put into reforming those things of special interest to us as fiscal or social conservatives will come to naught.

Comments (7)add comment
Deborah Gyapong: ...
This is excellent, Joseph. I hope it is widely read on both sides of the border.

Deborah
1

October 30, 2008
Craig Copland: ...
Joseph:

As always, some very interesting thoughts. Keep them coming! But speaking as one who is both a fiscal and a social conservative I see a little too much wishful thinking in what you are proposing. You may be right that the fundamental principles of both fiscal and social conservatism should lead both groups to a united political philosophy and common policies. But in practice that just didn’t happen. While Red Tories and Log Cabin Republicans are now endangered species, they have not gone away. Pro-life L/liberals are a very significant force, especially among Quebec catholics and immigrant groups. Alas, the evangelical CCF founders are now dead or extinct, but they once existed without suffering from acute dissonance. And somehow I just don’t see a gay atheist libertarian joining hands with your local Fellowship Baptist school-watch group, ever - even though both may call themselves conservative and recently voted for the CPC. As an alternative to coming together on ‘first principles’ it may be better to take a realpolitic stance and just declare ourselves a big tent, invite all who self-identify as conservative inside, and acknowledge that we have differences within the family and even occasional feuds but when necessary we are prepared to link arms, form a muskox-like phalanx and march in step (I know, terrible surfeit of bad metaphors, but you get the idea.) Back to you. Keep up the great work.

Craig
2

October 30, 2008
nbt: ...
Excellent article Joseph! I have one question though, wouldn't libertarians, who believe in protecting the constitution (the law), while upholding the fundamentals of free speech and individual liberty be the best avenue to a freer society in Canada. In such a society we wouldn't have the left or right dictating their social agendas through the vehicles of government, rather we would have a fair and honest debate through respect of free speech, ideas and religious beliefs.

At the moment, our constitution, nor our government, allows this to take place.
3

October 30, 2008
Dave: ...
In my experience, the grassroots of the party are generally people who are sympathetic both to fiscal and social conservatism. However, the minority of "liberal" conservatives are very assertive and even extreme, and wield an influence unwarranted by their numbers. Their most forceful line of argument is that "the country" will not tolerate social conservatism and that any step in that direction is electoral suicide. The answer to this should be research showing the electoral strength of known social conservative MP's.
4

October 30, 2008
Steve: ...
Interesting thoughts. I think the most important of these is not the argument against bifurcation though, but the explanation of why social conservatives need to focus their efforts a little more on shrinking government as opposed to changing policy. Your comments in this area are useful in that they are sound strategic advice for so-cons, but also because they help those who don't consider themselves social conservatives appreciate that the so-con agenda is not a threat to them, but an asset.

This is an important debate to have among social conservatives themselves who are led in this country by a handful of people who don't understand how government works and can't (or won't) think strategically.
5

October 31, 2008
Joseph replies: ...
Thanks to all for your comments.

I underestimate neither the complexity of the relationship between conservatives and so-called Red Tories, nor the challenge the Conservative Party faces is mediating that relationship. I don't think, however, that the CPC's conservatism is lukewarm in deference to its Red Tories. If you read my piece entitled "A Feckless Conservative Party?" you will understand what I consider to be the prinicple reason why the CPC is less conservative from a policy point of view than many of us would prefer.

At any rate, the purpose of this short essay was not to propose a comprehensive policy program for the CPC, but rather, to provoke some deeper thinking among conservatives of what it is they believe in and why. This is important for all conservatives, but especially for social conservatives who are chronically unable to present a theoretical framework within which they can develop a coherent and comprehensive policy agenda.

With respect to fiscal conservatives, I believe the points I made require little clarification.

The main thing is this - it is entirely appropriate for those interested in fiscal and economic issues to focus their attention on those issues, just as it is appropriate for those interested in social issues to focus their attention on those issues, but it is a mistake to interpret these differences in emphasis as indications of a valid philosophical divergence - they are not. Conservatism is a package deal. Fiscal conservatives who support state-imposed social liberalism (Red Tories) undermine their fiscal and economic goals; social conservatives who support fiscal liberalism (Blue Liberals, a term I use to describe, among others, conservative Catholics who have been traditionally loyal to the Liberal Party) undermine their social goals. Neither group is truly conservative despite adherence to conservative principles on specific issues and their use of the word in describing themselves with respect to these issues. What's more, I submit that neither have had any success in achieving their policy goals, precisely because their advocacy in one policy area negates their advocacy in others.

A quick elaboration on my view that social conservatives should prefer a more laissez-faire social policy is in order. Some social conservatives look to the state as the best vehicle for the re-establishment of a social order they believe to be important to the future of freedom and prosperity in our society. I regard this as profoundly mistaken and unconservative. Statism - even for ostensibly correct reasons - is always a mistake. Social conservatives ought to focus their effort on eliminating bad government policies that undermine the role and influence of the Church (I use the term in its broadest sense) and family while doing what they can to re-build and re-invigorate these vital social institutions, rather than simply trying to gain control of the government in the hope of converting it into a neo-Church. Fortunately, there is a growing understanding of this among social conservatives, especially those who are younger.

JBA
6

November 02, 2008
Luke: ...
Excellent article!! Tom Flanagan referred to the same issue in Harper's Team. I've always been curious for someone to expand on it. Thanks Joseph. I completely agree, even if fiscal and social conservatives don't agree on every issue, I think we need to support each other because we share a common enemy, the welfare state.
7

November 07, 2008

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