Posted by
Justin Lafferty on Friday, March 20, 2009 7:58:27 PM
Conservatives: Back to the Future?
By: Justin Lafferty
Who
can forget the movie trilogy starring Michael J. Fox as Marty McFly travels
back and forth from the past to the future? The first movie released in 1985
was amid the glory years of the conservative movement. Ronald Reagan, fresh off
his re-election with a historic 525 electoral votes to Walter Mondale’s 13, was
sworn in that January to become the oldest president ever sworn in at the age
of 73. Reagan, known as the Great Communicator, spoke so highly of America
as “the shining city on a hill” and inspired many Americans while turning
around the economy with tax cuts and less government.
While
attending the 2009 Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) at the
beautiful Omni Shoreham Hotel in Washington, DC,
I felt as if there was a reawakening of the Reagan spirit. While it is typical
for CPAC speakers to quote Reagan or discuss Reagan, this conference felt like
more than just talking about the former President. While many liberal and
conservative media hosts have suggested the Republican Party and conservative
movement would die if they did not change their principles, the conservatives
including myself thought differently. The feeling that we have strayed away
from the conservative principles and ideas that made Ronald Reagan and the
conservative movement great was obvious at the event. Ronald Reagan wasn’t in
attendance but I suspect he will have a lasting impact for years to come in the
conservative movement.
Ultimately,
there are two ways conservatives could go: the conservative Reagan-esque
approach that has brought abundant success in the past or something completely
different in a more moderate, less conservative approach. The moderate approach
seems to be attractive at first glance because it has the possibilities to
attract minorities to the party. If the choice wasn’t clear for some at the
beginning of the conference, the forceful speeches given over the three days
along with the keynote by Rush Limbaugh made it obviously clear that going back
to the principles that make us conservative was the right choice. The better
way to attract minorities to the party is to explain how conservative
principles can improve their lives and how lower taxes and less government will
allow more freedom to move up the economic ladder.
During
the Back to the Future trilogy, Marty travels back to 1955 in the first movie
and messes up some family events but finds a way to fix them and even make them
better. Could the GOP and conservatives travel back in time and use the Reagan
spirit and possibly even improve upon it? That’s exactly what may happen.
Despite having no clear frontrunner for the 2012 presidential elections, there
is a nearly unanimous decision to turn back to its roots. While it remains to
be seen whether this change will work in the 2010 and 2012 elections, it is a
bold move nevertheless. The Republican Party could be taking the Delorean back
to the 1980s to rediscover just who they are and how they can improve to gain
back not just the seats lost but the confidence of the American people. The
trip will surely deliver setbacks and challenges, but conservatives are ready
for the challenge to get “back to the future” of America.