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William A. Rusher is a Distinguished Fellow of the Claremont Institute. He served as publisher of National Review magazine from 1957 to 1988. A veteran spokesman for the conservative viewpoint on public issues, Rusher has become known across the United States in the past forty years. He has been a familiar television and radio personality. A newspaper columnist since 1973, his syndicated weekly "The Conservative Advocate" appears in newspapers all over the United States. A professional lecturer and prolific author, with five hardcover books and numerous magazine articles. His 1975 book, The Making of the New Majority Party, sold over a quarter of a million copies in hardcover and paperback, and his 1984 book, The Rise of the Right appeared in expanded form in a trade paperback edition.
Rusher has also been an influential political activist, and was one of the three men who in 1961 launched the draft of Barry Goldwater for the 1964 Republican nomination—a drive that captured and transformed the Republican Party, and continued under Ronald Reagan. He graduated from Princeton University and Harvard Law School, served in the Air Force in India in World War II, and was an associate for seven years at a large Wall Street law firm. In 1956 and 1957 he was associate counsel to the U.S. Senate's Internal Security Subcommittee before joining National Review.
In 1989 Mr. Rusher became a Distinguished Fellow of the Claremont Institute, for which he advises and writes from his home in San Francisco, in addition to continuing his regular schedule of columns. Mr. Rusher also remains a member of the Board of Advisors of the Ashbrook Center for Public Affairs, a member of the board of directors of National Review Inc., and chairman of the board of advisors of the Media Research Center.
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William Rusher (Dec 29, 2008)
America is now entering upon an era of government by the Democratic Party. Barack Obama will be our president for at least the next four years, possibly eight. The... more
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William Rusher (Dec 22, 2008)
President-elect Obama's designation of Sen. Hillary Clinton, D-N.Y., as his intended secretary of state creates a vacancy in her Senate seat, which New York Gov. David A.... more
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William Rusher (Dec 16, 2008)
In pure capitalist economic theory, there is no mystery about how we should deal with the crisis in the auto industry. If the companies can't make cars at prices people are... more
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William Rusher (Dec 08, 2008)
The American left had every reason to think that, in Barack Obama, it had finally succeeded in putting one of its devout disciples in the Oval Office. In the run-up to... more
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William Rusher (Dec 02, 2008)
Whenever a new president is inaugurated, there is always a tremendous amount of speculation over what he (or she) is going to "do." And there's no denying that the new... more
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William Rusher (Nov 24, 2008)
There are ominous signs that certain forces on the left are gearing up for a new attempt to impose a "fairness doctrine" on American television and radio... more
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William Rusher (Nov 17, 2008)
As this is being written, the newspapers and airwaves are awash with speculation that President-elect Barack Obama may name Sen. Hillary Clinton as his secretary of state.... more
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William Rusher (Nov 10, 2008)
The first big step of Barack Obama's administration, and quite possibly its defining achievement, will be abandoning America's military involvement in Iraq. Obama can... more
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William Rusher (Nov 04, 2008)
This column is being written in advance of the elections on Tuesday, but there is no serious doubt among observers that the Democrats will win -- increasing their margins... more
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William Rusher (Oct 28, 2008)
When all is said and done, every voter must decide which of two (it is usually two) candidates to vote for. For many people, it's easy: "Vote for the Democrat" or "Vote for... more
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William Rusher (Oct 21, 2008)
It was probably inevitable. In small doses, it may even be desirable. Never mind that the economic crisis we face isn't nationwide, but worldwide, with causes that are... more
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William Rusher (Oct 13, 2008)
In political terms, it doesn't really matter what caused the current economic crisis. Nor does it matter that it is worldwide. In a democracy, or at any rate in the United... more
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William Rusher (Oct 06, 2008)
The elections are now less than a month away, and rational observers are pretty well agreed that the Democrats are going to win. The big question is, by how much?
The... more
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William Rusher (Sep 30, 2008)
The first televised debate between John McCain and Barack Obama probably came out evenly enough to enable both sides to claim victory -- which is, of course, exactly what... more
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William Rusher (Aug 29, 2008)
The Democrats did what everyone knew they had to do: nominate Barack Obama by acclamation on the first ballot of their convention in Denver. But Hillary Clinton made... more
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William Rusher (Aug 19, 2008)
I hope my six-decades-long reputation as a redoubtable Cold Warrior will protect me from the suspicion that "Rusher has gone soft on Moscow" if I confess that I am... more
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William Rusher (Aug 12, 2008)
Almost without realizing it, America appears to be on the verge of electing its first black president.
Political observers are in general agreement that, in the normal... more
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William Rusher (Aug 05, 2008)
President Bush now has fewer than six months to serve, and the question arises as to what he ought to do with this remaining time.
There are important limitations on a... more
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William Rusher (Jul 29, 2008)
Among the few absolute certainties confronting the human race is the growing need for energy. As the world's population approaches 7 billion, with no end in sight, it is... more
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William Rusher (Jul 22, 2008)
T. Boone Pickens is one of America's biggest independent oil producers, so he could be forgiven if he simply chose to sit back and pile up his profits. But the Texas... more
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William Rusher (Jul 15, 2008)
At a time when, in previous presidential years, neither party yet knew who its nominees would be, both have already known that vital information for months, and the problem... more
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William Rusher (Jul 08, 2008)
Former Sen. Jesse Helms, who died last Friday at 86, was one of the true giants of conservatism during his 30 years in the U.S. Senate.
Many a politician becomes... more
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William Rusher (Jul 01, 2008)
It must be fun to be Justice Anthony Kennedy. You show up for a conference at the Supreme Court and almost always find that four of your colleagues (Ruth Bader Ginsburg,... more
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William Rusher (Jun 24, 2008)
The Democrats now find themselves in a thoroughly uncomfortable dilemma over Iraq.
Back in the early days of the American invasion, when things were going relatively... more
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William Rusher (Jun 17, 2008)
On Monday, June 16, San Francisco began implementing the ruling of the California Supreme Court authorizing same-sex marriages in the state. Meanwhile a state... more
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William Rusher (Jun 09, 2008)
So now it's all but official: The Democratic presidential nominee this year will be Sen. Barack Obama of Illinois. And facing him, it has been clear for several months, will... more
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William Rusher (Jun 03, 2008)
Former White House press secretary Scott McClellan's memoir, with its implication that President Bush and his allies overhyped the threat represented by Iraq to explain our... more
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William Rusher (May 26, 2008)
The news that Sen. Ted Kennedy has an inoperable malignant glioma in the left parietal sector of his brain is a major development in American politics. We can, and of... more
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William Rusher (May 20, 2008)
As matters stand, the Republican Party is facing an historic shellacking in November.
In part, this is just the usual yin and yang of partisan politics. The GOP has held... more
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William Rusher (May 15, 2008)
Former Republican congressman Robert Barr of Georgia recently announced he is running for president as a Libertarian. This is a formidable development, and it's by no means... more
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William Rusher (May 08, 2008)
In the May 4 New York Times, columnist Frank Rich asserts that "Anyone who does the math knows that America is on track to become a white-minority nation in three to four... more
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William Rusher (May 01, 2008)
Whenever a political figure lets fly with some remark that bounces badly, he or she is likely to protest that it was taken "out of context." The implication is that, if the... more
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William Rusher (Apr 22, 2008)
The remarkable performance of John McCain in the past few months has rightly garnered a lot of attention. Time was, not so long ago, when he was just one of several... more
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William Rusher (Apr 15, 2008)
The California Court of Appeals judge who ruled recently that parents "do not have a constitutional right to home-school their children" probably thought the point was... more
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William Rusher (Apr 10, 2008)
Charlton Heston, who died on April 5 at 84, had converted from Hollywood liberalism to staunch conservatism in his middle years. Apparently having seen or heard some... more
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William Rusher (Apr 03, 2008)
We have been told, by no less an authority than Sen. Barack Obama himself, that the recently retired Rev. Jeremiah Wright has been his pastor and spiritual adviser for the... more
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William Rusher (Mar 27, 2008)
Following its lopsided victory in the legislative elections of Jan. 12, Taiwan's Nationalist Party (or Kuomintang) has nailed down control of that vital island by electing... more
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William Rusher (Mar 20, 2008)
When the state legislatures decided to push the presidential nominating process into the early months of 2008, one wonders what they expected. Whatever it was, the two... more
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William Rusher (Mar 13, 2008)
Modern political history offers no more astonishing story than the account of how the American conservative movement emerged, seemingly out of nowhere, in the early 1950s,... more
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William Rusher (Mar 06, 2008)
Every few years, some group of scientists, egged on by the media, is persuaded to warn mankind of some new danger facing the human race. This triggers the anxiety that... more
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William Rusher (Feb 28, 2008)
The deep thinkers have now done their work, and are back with the result: What American voters want, in this year of our Lord 2008, is "change."
Now, why didn't you and I... more
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William Rusher (Feb 14, 2008)
Let me begin by acknowledging that I was one of the many who thought that Mitt Romney, rather than John McCain, would be the Republican presidential nominee in 2008. Six... more
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William Rusher (Feb 07, 2008)
With the withdrawals of Fred Thompson and Rudy Giuliani from the contest, and the consistent failure of Mike Huckabee to build effectively on his evangelical base, the race... more
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William Rusher (Jan 31, 2008)
It's slowly dawning on the liberals that it's not going to be enough to ignore Ronald Reagan. Like it or not, they're going to have to take him on, head-first, and try to... more
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William Rusher (Jan 24, 2008)
The voters of Taiwan have just handed their friends and well-wishers in the United States a gratifying victory in their nation's parliamentary elections. It hasn't received... more
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William Rusher (Jan 17, 2008)
No discussion about possible presidential nominees gets far without the words "vice president" turning up. John Edwards doesn't seem quite up to the task of beating Hillary... more
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William Rusher (Jan 10, 2008)
The sweeping victory of Barack Obama in Iowa's Democratic primary seems to have generated a kind of electric shock among political observers. Suddenly it seems possible,... more
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William Rusher (Jan 03, 2008)
There is always much about the future that is obscure, but of one thing we can be reasonably certain: In 2008, the United States will be involved militarily in Iraq. It may... more