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Friday, December 29, 2006
Rebecca Hagelin :: Townhall.com Columnist
Learning from a 'Glorious Disaster'
by Rebecca Hagelin
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It’s only natural, on the threshold of a new year, to think about beginnings. So let me ask my fellow conservatives: When did the modern conservative movement get its start?

Some of you will probably say in 1980, when Ronald Reagan was elected president. That’s understandable, given all that he accomplished and his unique ability to inspire Americans to understand that increasing individual freedom and responsibility -- not government -- would restore America as the land of opportunity. But you have to go back a little further to find the spark that led to Reagan’s election. Specifically, you have to return to the election of 1964.

True, that was hardly a happy moment for conservatives. Lyndon Johnson soundly beat our candidate, Barry Goldwater, and we saw Johnson’s campaign pull out all the stops to portray Goldwater as a trigger-happy madman. (I say "our candidate" because at the tender age of three, I accompanied my mother on a neighborhood door-to-door campaign for Goldwater). Yet we learn in a marvelous new book, aptly titled “A Glorious Disaster,” that a great movement would rise from the ashes of defeat. Author J. William Middendorf II would know: As Goldwater’s campaign treasurer, he was there every step of the way during that painful election.

One reason conservatives could take heart is that many voters who opted for Johnson were rejecting a caricature of Goldwater, not his ideas. As Reagan commented at the time, “All of the landslide majority did not vote against a conservative philosophy, they voted against a false image our liberal opponents successfully mounted.”

The most infamous example: the “Daisy” TV ad, in which a little girl counts the petals of a daisy. Her voice is soon overtaken by the countdown of a missile launch. The image of a mushroom cloud appears, as Johnson tells viewers that the stakes are too high for them to stay home and not vote. Translation: Goldwater will annihilate mankind in a nuclear war. And we complain about negative campaigning today!

The funny thing is, Goldwater knew his election was a near-hopeless prospect nearly a year before the election was held. He had been anticipating a spirited contest with John Kennedy. But when the president was murdered in November 1963, everything changed. Goldwater would now square off against Johnson, whom he considered a “dirty fighter.” He seriously considered withdrawing from the race, but his staff, including Middendorf, persuaded him to fight -- if only for the sake of the conservatives who were working hard for his election.

So a decision that would affect conservatives down to this very day was cast. According to Middendorf, Goldwater didn’t want to run, didn’t even want to be president, but he would run anyway -- because it would lay the foundation for conservative victories down the road. “Lose the election,” Goldwater said, “but win the Party.”

We all know the rest. Ronald Reagan gave an electrifying election-eve speech, “A Time for Choosing,” that showcased his unique appeal; two years later, he was elected governor of California. The “destroyed” Republican Party was soon winning elections, and American politics was transformed. Continued...

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About The Author
Rebecca Hagelin is a public speaker on the family and culture and the author of the new best seller, 30 Ways in 30 Days to Save Your Family.
 
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Two words: Deval Patrick
And for those not aware, this is Massachusetts.

I think Deval Patrick is the BEST thing for Mass Conservatives yet. He isn't even in office until tommorow and has already lost his first battle (on gay marrage) and been told that he will loose his second (raising taxes).

More Goldwater

.....aurorawatcher...

.....excellent post! ...if the conservatives who did not vote ...or the moderates who voted for a democrat thought they were sending a message to the Republican Party ...it was the wrong message ...this is what the President said after the election ...

....."What the election told me", he said, "was that the voters want me to work more closely with the Democrats". ...

.....I wrote to the RNC after the election and warned them not to read the results as a mandate to move to the left for '08 ...but I am afraid that they might do that ...

.....I suggested that they support a Gingrich/Santorum ticket ...the Republican nominee in '08 will be a predicter of where the Party is headed .....COLOSSUS
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