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Saturday, March 8, 2008

William F. Buckley Chased Jew-Hatred out of Conservative Politics


Fifty years ago, conservative politics wasn't a very tolerant place especially for Jews. Conservative politics were dominated by the likes of Charles Lindbergh, the John Birch society who were notorious Jew Haters. The "RED"scare added fuel to the fire as Jews were thought to be the leaders of the communist movement in the US. That was until William F. Buckley became the voice of the conservative politics in the United States. It was Buckley who purged the Anti-Semites out of republican politics. Then when Pat Buchanan, tried to bring anti-semitism and holocaust denial into presidential politics in the 1980s, it was Buckley who pushing him to the outer fringe of the party. William F. Buckley is a true American Hero

Bill Buckley and the Jews

The impact of the writer who chased the anti-Semites out of mainstream politics
By Jonathan S. Tobin

March 6, 2008

Was there any major American personality in the last half-century who seemed more remote from the sensibilities of most American Jews than William F. Buckley? Buckley, who passed away last week at the age of 83, was the fervent Catholic patrician whose work helped create the modern American conservative movement in the 1950s at a time when nothing could have been more remote from the thinking of most Jews in this country than his National Review.

Though much has changed in the 53 years since NR’s debut, given that most Jews are still, at the very least, the reliable supporters of the Democrats, if not hard-core liberals, its likely that most of them noted the passing of Buckley without emotion.

After all, Buckley’s eccentric mid-Atlantic accent, his cheerful intellectual snobbery symbolized by his delight in $10 words where simple ones would have served just as well, his lavish lifestyle (skiing at Gstaad and sailing on the high seas), as well as his rock-solid conservative politics are not the sort of things that most Jews identify with.

A chorus of commentators have rightly extolled his influence, gentlemanly grace toward his opponents and literary virtuosity as an essayist and novelist. His “Firing Line” television program was the granddaddy of all the political talk shows that have followed (though none have been as thoughtful or fair). It was he who made it clear that the expression “conservative intellectual” was not an oxymoron and inspired countless young writers to try to emulate him.

But there is one other aspect of his amazing career that deserves mention. It is the fact that as much as any other person, Bill Buckley cleared the way not only for a conservative movement where Jews would be welcomed, but that it was his leadership that set the stage for an American politics in which anti-Semitism was confined to the fever swamps of the far right and far left.

As conservative columnist George Will has written, without National Review, which Buckley started in 1955, much of what followed in American politics — including Barry Goldwater’s capture of the Republican nomination for president in 1964 and then the electoral victories of Ronald Reagan and the Republican takeover of Congress in 1994 — is unimaginable. American conservatism as we have known it, with all of its subsequent ups and downs, has its origins in the pages of that magazine in which its editor helped create a coherent movement out of what had previously been a loose array of cranks.

In order to give life to that movement, Buckley specifically chose to rid its ranks of people who espoused the sort of anti-Semitism that once was inescapable on the American right.

Buckley would himself acknowledge that prejudice was a presence in his own home growing up. And as a youngster, Buckley admitted that he was a fan of Charles Lindbergh and his “America First” movement, whose flirtation with anti-Semitism was of a piece with its advocacy of appeasement of Adolf Hitler’s Nazi Germany.

But as National Review took flight in the late 1950s, anti-Semitic writers found themselves on the outside looking in. So, too, did apologists for the extremist John Birch Society. But despite the fact that his conservatism was one that was informed by his own Catholic faith (something that was consistently made clear in the pages of National Review), Buckley made his journal, and by extension, the movement for which it served as an unofficial bible, off-limits to the anti-Semitism that was commonplace in the world in which he grew up.

Though he didn’t always agree with all of its policies, Buckley was also a consistent supporter of Israel. A staunch anti-Communist, he was also deeply supportive of the movement to free Soviet Jewry at a time when many in this country (including some Jews) were loath to speak out because it might be interpreted as opposition to a policy of detente with Moscow.

Long after he chased the Birchers out of NR, Buckley found himself forced to confront the issue again. When longtime colleagues Pat Buchanan and Joseph Sobran used their bully pulpits on the right to bash Israel and stigmatize Jews for their support for the state, it was again Buckley who took on the haters. Buckley repudiated Sobran’s writing, which he labeled anti-Semitic, and pushed him off the magazine’s masthead.

As the issue continued to percolate in the aftermath of the Persian Gulf war in December 1991, he devoted an entire issue of the magazine to an essay titled “In Search of Anti-Semitism” (which was also the title of the book he later published on the same subject), in which he took on Buchanan, who was preparing an insurgent run for the White House against the first President Bush. His conclusion was damning: “I find it impossible to defend Pat Buchanan against the charge that what he did and said during the period under examination amounted to anti-Semitism, whatever it was that drove him to say and do it,” Buckley wrote. Though Buchanan would continue to snipe away on television, it was largely Buckley’s doing that he and others like him would do so from outside a perch in one of our two major parties rather than inside it.

The long-term implications of Buckley’s stands were enormous. By remaking the conservative movement in his own image, in which the emphasis was on anti-communism and a libertarian skepticism of government power, he ensured that it, and the Republican Party, which it came to dominate, would be a place where Jew-haters were unwelcome.

That enabled liberal Jews, such as Commentary editor Norman Podhoretz, to feel comfortable making common cause with the right on a host of issues as he began his own journey away from the left. Though expectations that the Jews would ditch liberalism en masse were always unrealistic, the birth of an intellectually viable brand of Jewish conservative thought in this country wouldn’t have happened had not Buckley first cleaned out the GOP stables.

In terms of practical politics, Buckley’s rout of the anti-Semites made it possible for the sort of bipartisan consensus in favor of support for Israel that we now take for granted. He replaced the Buchanan-like world of American conservatism that existed before National Review with something that was not only more successful, but purged of Jew-hatred.

If Israel Lobby authors John Mearsheimer and Stephen Walt want to find the real father of the enormous support for Israel in our political system today, they can look no further than the irrepressible Buckley, whose life was a testament to the power of ideas. His was a political faith that most Jews never embraced, but as we survey a political spectrum in which our enemies are confined to the margins, we should all remember the unique achievements of this American original. May his memory be for a blessing for all who love liberty.


1 comment:

Anonymous said...

I believe our Jewish members would strongly disagree with your assessment of JBS as being Jew-haters:
http://www.jbs.org/node/7326

I have also been given permission from one of our National Council members, who is Jewish, to use one of his recent quotes:

“I am very angry at columists like Linda Chavez using Buckley's death as a means to discredit JBS by citing Buckley's claim of anti-Semitism in JBS. In response I am writing this very personal item for you to use in any manner appropriate.

When two members of the staff of JBS were noted as having anti-Semitic thoughts and making them public, Robert Welch, founder of JBS, immediately terminated their membership in JBS. Then Mr. Welch requested the California Legislature to investigate JBS since it had been accused of racism and anti-Semitism. After a year, or more, of detailed and intensive investigation the California Senate issued its report which stated that The John Birch Society has been accused of being a racist and anti-Semitic organization which charge is not supported by the facts. (THIS IS PARAPHRASED FROM THE ORIGINAL).

At the same time I was doing my own investigation since it was my aim to destroy that anti-Semitic organization because I am Jewish. After reading most of the Society's publications, seeing their movies and hearing their speakers, I asked JBS members who were co-workers if I could attend their meetings. I was welcomed to do so, and I did so. After about a year of personal investigation, I found that I was in agreement with the Society and joined, as did my wife a year later. Our two children attended JBS Youth Camps. All four are Life Members. I have served as a Chapter Leader, Section Leader, Head of Speakers' Committee, Youth Camp Counselor and Camp Director. In 1995, I was brought up as a Member of the National Council.

In the 1970s, the Jewish members of the Society formed The Jewish Right, members had to be Jewish and non-members could join as associate members, and many did. When The Jewish Right was formed, Robert Welch sent a personal letter to his largest supporters suggesting that they could help support the Jewish Right financially. The Jewish Right went out of business when it was decided that the energym activity and funds could better be used if we concentrated on JBS business.”

--David Eisenberg

Thank you for your consideration in posting this.

Bill Hahn
Public Relations Manager
The John Birch Society