The Conservative Case for Voting for Clinton
Why support a candidate who rejects your preferences and offends your
opinions? Don’t do it for her—do it for the republic, and the
Constitution.
David Frum / The Atlantic | 2 November 2016
If the polls are correct, many
disaffected Republicans are making their peace with Donald Trump in the
final hours of the 2016 campaign. The usual term for this process is
“returning home.” This time, we need a new phrase. The familiar
Republican home has been bulldozed and replaced by a Trump-branded
edifice. It will require long and hard work to restore and rebuild what
has been lost.
Between now and then, however, there is a ballot to face. Last week, I advanced the best case I could for each of the available options. Now, however, comes the time for choosing—and for explicating the reasons for that choice.
Instead, the case for Trump swiftly shifts to a fervid case against Hillary Clinton. Here for example are some lines from an op-ed
coauthored by Bill Bennett, a high conservative eminence and former
secretary of education, and F.H. Buckley, a law professor, Trump
supporter, and sometime speechwriter.
Consider, then, what would happen were the “Clinton Cash” machine to move into the White House. We’d have a government with the morals of a banana republic; and crony capitalism, the silent killer of the American economy, would increasingly burden entrepreneurs. Wasteful regulations, drafted to benefit the clients of K Street lobbyists, would transfer wealth from dispersed lower and middle-class Americans to the rich and well-connected.
The courtier class of Clinton donors would flourish, but woe to those who would fail to partner with the government. It might not be a kleptocracy, but it would be a huge move in that direction.
Worse still, all the powers of the state would be unleashed against political enemies, with tax audits, EPA investigations, and charges brought under one of the numberless and technical federal public welfare offences. Montesquieu defined political liberty as the “tranquility of spirit which comes from the opinion each one has of his security,” and a Clinton administration would see to it that its political opponents would never know such tranquility.We saw a bit of this during Bill Clinton’s presidency, and (whatever else might be said about him) he didn’t have a mean bone in his body. With Mrs. Clinton it would be far worse. She is a very different sort of person from her spouse, and much more closely resembles a Richard Nixon, a Nixon without his accomplishments and with a fawning media that could be relied upon to defend her when it counted, as well as a corrupt administration that would back her to the hilt.
The conclusion that follows from such sizzling
philippics is that anybody, literally anybody, wearing an “R” by his
name should be preferred to the demonic Clinton. “Everybody on this
stage is better than Hillary Clinton,” argued
former Florida Governor Jeb Bush in the sixth Republican debate,
January 2016. Bush surely did not believe that, but in the moment, it
must have seemed a forgivable fib. Hillary Clinton would have paid a
similar compliment to Bernie Sanders on a Democratic debate stage, but
who doubts that privately she would have preferred Jeb Bush to the
cranky Vermont socialist?
Demonology aside, most conservatives
and Republicans—and yes, many non-conservatives and non-Republicans—will
recognize many of the factual predicates of the critiques of Hillary
Clinton’s methods and character. The Clintons sold access to a present
secretary of state and a potential future president in pursuit of
personal wealth. Hillary Clinton does indeed seem a suspicious and
vindictive personality. For sure, a President Clinton will want to spend
and regulate even more than the Obama administration has done.
Like Henny Youngman, however, the voter must always ask: compared to what?
One
of only two people on earth will win the American presidency on
November 8. Hillary Clinton is one of those two possibilities. Donald
Trump is the only other.
Yes, I fear Clinton’s grudge-holding. Should I fear it so much that I rally to a candidate who has already explicitly promised
to deploy antitrust and libel law against his critics and opponents?
Who incited violence at his rallies? Who ejects reporters from his
events if he objects to their coverage? Who told
a huge audience in Australia that his top life advice was: "Get even
with people. If they screw you, screw them back 10 times as hard. I
really believe it”? Who idealizes Vladimir Putin, Saddam Hussein, and
the butchers of Tiananmen as strong leaders to be admired and emulated?
Should
I be so appalled by the Clinton family’s access-selling that I prefer
instead a president who boasts of a lifetime of bribing politicians to
further his business career? Who defaults on debts and contracts as an
ordinary business method, and who avoids taxes by deducting the losses
he inflicted on others as if he had suffered them himself? Who cheated
the illegal laborers he employed at Trump Tower out of their humble
hourly wage? Who owes
hundreds of millions of dollars to the Bank of China? Who refuses to
disclose his tax returns, perhaps to conceal his business dealings with
Vladimir Putin’s inner circle?
To
demonstrate my distaste for people whose bodies contain mean bones,
it’s proposed that I give my franchise to a man who boasts of his
delight in sexual assault? Who mocks the disabled, who denounces
immigrant parents whose son laid down his life for this country, who
endorses religious bigotry, and who denies the Americanism of everyone
from the judge hearing the fraud case against Trump University to the
44th president of the United States?
I’m invited to recoil from
supposedly fawning media (media, in fact, which have devoted more
minutes of network television airtime to Clinton’s email misjudgment
than to all policy topics combined) and instead empower a bizarre new
online coalition of antisemites, misogyists, cranks, and conspiracists
with allegedly ominous connections to Russian state spy agencies?
Is this real life?
To
vote for Trump as a protest against Clinton’s faults would be like
amputating a leg because of a sliver in the toe; cutting one’s throat to
lower one’s blood pressure.
I more or less agree with Trump on
his signature issue, immigration. Two years ago, I would have rated
immigration as one of the very most important issues in this election.
But that was before Trump expanded the debate to include such
questions as: “Should America honor its NATO commitments?” “Are American
elections real or fake?” “Is it OK for a president to use the office to
promote his family business?” “Are handicapped people comical?”
If we arrive at the bizarre endpoint
where such seemingly closed questions are open to debate, partisan
rancor has overwhelmed and overpowered the reasoning functions of our
brains. America's first president cautioned
his posterity against succumbing to such internecine hatreds: “The
spirit of revenge, natural to party dissension … leads at length to a
more formal and permanent despotism. The disorders and miseries which
result gradually incline the minds of men to seek security and repose in
the absolute power of an individual; and sooner or later the chief of
some prevailing faction, more able or more fortunate than his
competitors, turns this disposition to the purposes of his own
elevation, on the ruins of public liberty.” George Washington’s farewell
warning resounds with reverberating relevance in this election year.
We
don’t have to analogize Donald Trump to any of the lurid tyrants of
world history to recognize in him the most anti-constitutional
personality ever to gain a major-party nomination for the U.S.
presidency. I cannot predict whether Trump would succeed in elevating
himself “on the ruins of public liberty.” The outcome would greatly
depend on the resolve, integrity, and courage of other leaders and other
institutions, especially the Republican leaders in Congress. To date,
their record has not been reassuring, but who knows: Maybe they would
discover more courage and independence after they bestowed the awesome
powers of the presidency than they did while Trump was merely a party
nominee. Or maybe not.
What we should all foresee is that a President Trump will certainly try to realize Washington’s nightmare. He must not be allowed to try.
That
Donald Trump has approached so near the White House is a bitter
reproach to everybody who had the power to stop him. I include myself in
this reproach. Early on, I welcomed Trump’s up-ending of some outdated
Republican Party dogmas—taking it for granted that of course such a
ridiculous and obnoxious fraud could never win a major party’s
nomination. But Trump did win. Now, he stands within a percentage point
or two or at most four of the presidency of the United States.
Having
failed to act promptly at the outset, it’s all the more important to
act decisively before it’s too late. The lesson Trump has taught is not
only that certain Republican dogmas have passed out of date, but that
American democracy itself is much more vulnerable than anyone would have
believed only 24 months ago. Incredibly, a country that—through wars
and depression—so magnificently resisted the authoritarian temptations
of the mid-20th century has half-yielded to a more farcical version of
that same threat without any of the same excuse. The hungry and
houseless Americans of the Great Depression sustained a constitutional
republic. How shameful that the Americans of today—so vastly better off
in so many ways, despite their undoubted problems—have done so much less
well.
I have no illusions about Hillary
Clinton. I expect policies that will seem to me at best
counter-productive, at worst actively harmful. America needs more
private-market competition in healthcare, not less; lighter regulation
of enterprise, not heavier; reduced immigration, not expanded; lower
taxes, not higher. On almost every domestic issue, I stand on one side;
she stands on the other. I do not imagine that she will meet me, or
those who think like me, anywhere within a country mile of half-way.
But
she is a patriot. She will uphold the sovereignty and independence of
the United States. She will defend allies. She will execute the laws
with reasonable impartiality. She may bend some rules for her own and
her supporters’ advantage. She will not outright defy legality
altogether. Above all, she can govern herself; the first indispensable
qualification for governing others.
So I will vote for the
candidate who rejects my preferences and offends my opinions. (In fact, I
already have voted for her.) Previous generations accepted infinitely
heavier sacrifices and more dangerous duties to defend democracy. I’ll
miss the tax cut I’d get from united Republican government. But there
will be other elections, other chances to vote for what I regard as more
sensible policies. My party will recover to counter her agenda in
Congress, moderate her nominations to the courts, and defeat her bid for
re-election in 2020. I look forward to supporting Republican recovery
and renewal.
This November, however, I am voting
not to advance my wish-list on taxes, entitlements, regulation, and
judicial appointments. I am voting to defend Americans' profoundest
shared commitment: a commitment to norms and rules that today protect my
rights under a president I don’t favor, and that will tomorrow do the
same service for you.
Vote the wrong way in November, and those
norms and rules will shudder and shake in a way unequaled since the
Union won the Civil War.
I appreciate that Donald Trump is too
slovenly and incompetent to qualify as a true dictator. This country is
not so broken as to allow a President Trump to arrest opponents or
silence the media. Trump is a man without political ideas. Trump's main
interest has been and will continue to be self-enrichment by any means,
no matter how crooked. His next interest after that is never to be
criticized by anybody for any reason, no matter how justified—maybe most
especially when justified. Yet Trump does not need to achieve a
dictatorship to subvert democracy. This is the age of “illiberal
democracy,” as Fareed Zakaria calls it, and across the world we’ve seen
formally elected leaders corrode democratic systems from within. Surely
the American system of government is more robust than the Turkish or
Hungarian or Polish or Malaysian or Italian systems. But that is not
automatically true. It is true because of the active vigilance of
freedom-loving citizens who put country first, party second. Not in many
decades has that vigilance been required as it is required now.
Your
hand may hesitate to put a mark beside the name, Hillary Clinton.
You’re not doing it for her. The vote you cast is for the republic and
the Constitution.
David Frum is a senior editor at The Atlantic and the chairman of Policy Exchange. In 2001-2002, he was a speechwriter for President George W. Bush.
I trust in her lie always!!! Within 6 months 6th body counts and I still believe her lie always. Clintons are murderers!!!! Clintons are drug dealer + weapon dealer. Democracy has different meaning to the Clinton's.
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