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Nationalism, not Hostility Towards Elites is the Main Divide Between Libertarians and the "New Right"

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In a much-discussed recent Marginal Revolution post, my George Mason University colleague, economist Tyler Cowen argues that the main factor that divides “classical liberals” and the the “New Right” is attitudes towards elites. In my view, by contrast, other factors are far more significant—most notably nationalism.

Where Cowen uses the term “classical liberal,” I prefer “libertarian” to denote the view that government power must be tightly constrained in both the “economic” and social spheres in order to protect liberty and expand human welfare. “New Right” is an even more fuzzy term than “classical liberal” or “libertarian.” But, in this context, I think it refers to the main strands of the Trump-era conservative right, particularly “national conservatism.”

Here’s Cowen:

In the Unpopulist, Robert Tracinski correctly points out that the New Right isn’t actually interested in limiting the power of elites. To the contrary, they’re happy to grant elites vast discretionary authority, so long as those elites are on the right side of the political spectrum:

This comfort with elite influence is reflected in such elements of New Right thought as their support for very broad executive power (which necessary empowers the president and his elite subordinates), their backing of “industrial policy” (which simultaneously empowers elites in both government and politically influential private industries), and much else.

Of course, many New Rightists do genuinely hate and fear left-wing and centrist political elites. But in that respect, they are little different from adherents of various other ideologies. As Tracinski notes, the political left also has a long history of hostility to rival elites, such as wealthy businessmen and social conservative religious leaders.

For that matter, I think Cowen understates the extent of libertarian/classical liberal hostility to various  elites. It’s true that most libertarians don’t regard political elites as “totally hopeless” and believe those elites might have some useful function. But most of us also believe that elite power should be much more tightly constrained than is presently the case, which is one reason why we favor radical reductions in the power of government. In one sense, libertarians are actually more anti-elitist than New Rightists. Instead of seeking to replace one set of overmighty elites with another, we advocate severe restrictions on the power of government, regardless of which elites happen to be in power at the time.

With the possible exception of anarchists, libertarians do not propose to dispense with political elites entirely. But the same is even more true of New Rightists.

If anti-elitism is not the main factor dividing libertarians from the New Right, what is? I would suggest it is the conflict between the cosmopolitanism of the former and the nationalism of the latter. As Cowen notes libertarianism (or classical liberalism) is a cosmopolitan worldview committed to liberty and equal rights for all, regardless of background. That includes a commitment to free trade and free migration, among other things. By contrast, the New Right—especially in its “national conservative” manifestation—are exactly the opposite. They are European-style ethno-nationalists who view foreign cultures and people with suspicion, often descending into xenephobia.

It is no accident that protectionism and severe restrictions on immigration are their signature policies. And Donald Trump’s border wall project is perhaps their most symbolically resonant initiative.

In his farewell speech, Ronald Reagan—the iconic representative of the previously dominant form of conservatism—praised immigration and envisioned America as a “shining city” that should be “open to anyone with the will and the heart to get here.” It is virtually impossible to imagine any New Right leader saying anything like that. In contrast to Reagan’s emphasis on mutually beneficial openness, today’s New Rightists hold a largely zero-sum view of the world in which foreign goods, people, and cultures are objects of suspicion and fear.

This cultural insecurity also leads them to be willing to use state power to suppress what they regard as domestic cultural threats, as well. Thus we get speech restrictions such as Florida’s “Stop Woke Law” and moral panics over things like “drag queen story hours,” which many New Rightists would also like to suppress by force.

In his classic 1960 essay, “Why I am Not a Conservative,” F.A. Hayek wrote that “strident nationalism,”  partly rooted in what he called “the conservative distrust of the new and the strange,” often “provides the bridge from conservatism to collectivism.” This is a prescient description of the New Right. Their combination of nationalism and fear of cultural change leads them to favor massive use of state power.

That, in turn, puts them at odds with libertarians to a greater extent than Reagan-era conservatives were. The latter  differed with libertarians on various issues, and were certainly far more socially conservative than we are. But they still had considerable commitment to universal liberal principles, and were therefore less xenophobic and less statist than today’s ethno-nationalist conservatives are.

The post Nationalism, not Hostility Towards Elites is the Main Divide Between Libertarians and the “New Right” appeared first on Reason.com.


Source: https://reason.com/volokh/2022/11/28/nationalism-not-hostility-towards-elites-is-the-main-divide-between-libertarians-and-the-new-right/


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