
At a time when American conservatism is said to have lost its way as a principled force, a careful reexamination seems necessary, for those who claim this and those who disagree. Either camp would profit from taking a fresh look at the long, much-admired career of the conservative movementโs reputed founder.ย A Man and His Presidents: The Political Odyssey of William F. Buckley Jr., by Alvin Felzenberg, is worth reading for anyone who wishes to become acquainted with him, or reacquainted.
It doesnโt, on its own, provide enough new insight on Buckleyโs brilliant public life to qualify as a major contribution to conservatismโs history, as we can reasonably expect of former New York Times book review editor Sam Tanenhausโ long-awaited biography. But in other respects, it serves the potential readership for a Buckley book quite well.
For younger people especially, itโs an informative overview of a half-centuryโs political developments as seen by a great conservative leader. Itโs also an illustration of how an intellectual, or intellectual-plus-activist, can engage in high politics while maintaining a degree of independence from it. For older readers and especially those fairly knowledgeable about Buckley, the book is a richly detailed reminder of the balance, nearly always a sensible one, that he struck between conservatismโs need for ideological consistency and its practical requirements. Felzenberg has reintroduced Buckley into our political discourseโnot as a symbol with which to scold conservatives for the intellect, sophistication, wit, or moderation they are alleged to lack today, but as an exemplar of something more difficult to achieve: political wisdom coupled with tireless, creative political action.
Buckley was, in a most impressive range of historical circumstances, both a deeply principled and a thoughtfully flexible (also good-humored) man of the Right. This invaluable synthesis resulted from the trouble he habitually tookโdespite his notorious impatience in some other waysโto draw careful distinctions as the basis for his judgments and priorities. It is no exaggeration to call Buckleyโs life a feast of reason. We should remember, however, the abundance of prudence, patience, and proportionality that leavened his reason. His was the reason of a Burke or a Lincoln, not that of an arid systematizer. A Man and His Presidents includes many good examples of how Buckleyโs careful distinctions led to thoughtful, well-adapted applications of principle as he observed the political scene. But its theme is a more direct kind of involvement.
One hazard in writing about a historical figure so colorful and multi-dimensional is that his real significance in the worldโs affairs may blur into the background. As the author notes in his preface: โWhen friends, colleagues, and relatives learned that I was writing a book about William F. Buckley Jr., they almost universally had the same response: โOh, what fun!โ Fun was a word often associated with Buckley,โ an intellectual star whom the author saw on the cover of Time magazine when he was a college freshman. To his credit, he goes beyond the โWilliam Buckley/Conservatism Can Be Funโ headline to concentrate on a much weightier subject, what he rightly calls the political odyssey.
Felzenberg, a veteran of two presidential administrations who teaches at the University of Pennsylvaniaโs Annenberg School for Communication, stresses Buckleyโs โskills as a political strategist and activist, behind-the-scenes operator, and networker par excellence.โ For while he wrote beautifully, he was โas much a politician as he was a writer, and an activist as well as a commentator on events.โ
One of Buckleyโs closest associates, longtime National Review publisher William Rusher, of whom I wrote a biography several years ago, would have questioned descriptions like โstrategistโ and โpolitician.โ Rusher greatly respected Buckley, of course, but also considered his worldly colleague to be short on political sophistication, and dilettantish in his political engagement. A Man and His Presidents qualifies as a serious challenge to such a perception. It must be added, however, that one doesnโt get the impression Felzenberg seriously considered Rusherโs reservations. He and other significant people in Buckleyโs life who might, in various ways, have helped readers to occasionally take a more distanced perspective barely figure in the book.
Another quibble is that the title, referring grandly to โHis Presidents,โ is overstated. Since Buckley knew only two of them well, Felzenberg doesnโt actually have detailed relationships to describe between the National Review founder and most of the 11 Presidents in his adult lifetime. Buckleyโs relationships with Ronald Reagan and the senior George Bush, though, are intrinsically interesting, even apart from their possible lessons for conservatives today. The same can be said of Buckleyโs thoughts on the other inhabitants of the Oval Office from Harry Truman to the junior Bush, on their policies, and on the political settings in which they functioned.
As for Presidents Reagan and George H.W. Bush, Buckley undeniably was a supportive friend to both of these very different menโand far more than that to Reagan. How much more is a question less easily resolved, at least in this book. โThe role Buckley played in advancing Reaganโs career . . . cannot be overstated,โ Felzenberg writes. He became the California Governorโs โmost trusted adviser outside his official family and, after Nancy Reagan, Ronald Reaganโs primary enabler and protector.โ While these are large claims, there is more to substantiate them than the fact of a close (if we bear in mind Reaganโs general aloofness from people) friendship with Buckley, or Reaganโs longstanding subscription to NR and Felzenbergโs claim that he read each issue cover-to-cover.
There are many ways to help a politician, and many of them are described here. Add such things up over decades and Felzenbergโs โcannot be overstatedโ gains plausibility. In the early years alone, Buckley advised the Reagans to assist writer Truman Capote in his work on a documentary about the death penalty; also to befriend Richard and Shirley Clurman, because the Time magazine editor and his wife were โgood funโ and very influential; also to (in Felzenbergโs words) โtake stock of how the โAcademic Establishmentโ functioned and identify a few scholars with whom he might make common cause.โ
Somehow, Buckley even persuaded Esquire โnot to proceed with a piece it had commissioned on Reagan from the left-leaning journalist Jessica Mitford,โ Felzenbergโs description of whom is an understatement. Although the article did appear in the radical Ramparts, Buckley was proud to have, as he said, โdefangedโ itโby which he presumably meant that it would have been more damaging had it run in the more prestigious publication. More generally, Reagan โaccepted Buckleyโs point that intellectuals could mar his public image and increasingly relied upon Buckley as a bridge to at least some of them.โ
A Man and His Presidents might have paid more attention to one element of its subjectโs psychology: his anti-political instincts. Once, in the early years of NR, Buckley observed that the menacing quality of the 20th century had (he cursed the age for this reason) made it necessary for all โsentientโ people to concern themselves with politics, that โpreoccupation of the quarter-educatedโ which he said he otherwise would have avoided. In his later years, he explained more serenely that his enormous load of commitments in public life resulted from an overwhelming sense of obligation and gratitude toward America. Such remarks show a man not naturally drawn to politics but rather compelled to it. That makes Buckleyโs sustained politicalโas distinct from literary and journalisticโefforts all the more admirable.
Whatever we might conclude about Buckleyโs ambivalence toward politics, the book is laudable for its emphasis on him as a public man rather than a mere celebrity. Rusher would have approved. In a 1976 memo to Buckley, Rusher touched on the tensions between elite conservatives like themselves and the underestimated populist Right. He said his recent experiences with the populists had taught him
there are people out there in the boonies who lead reasonably active and dedicated lives (politically speaking) without understanding or even knowing much about what you and I are doing. Worse yet, they note and absorb only the highly visible but largely irrelevant epiphenomena concerning you: the yachts, etc.
Rusher then warned against taking the wrong attitude toward conservatives who knew Buckley only as a rich (in both senses of the word) and colorful character: โIt is of course easy to grow impatient or even angry with such people, but I suspect that in doing so we reveal a parochialism not unlike their own.โ
Who was Buckley? The question seems to gain force with each year that has passed since his death in 2008. For the many nostalgic conservatives with strong emotional investments in Buckley, the fading of familiarity with him among his countrymen hurts a little, and should. More important than such pangs, though, is the need to acquaint new generations with him. As General Patton stressed, speaking of Americaโs dead in the Second World War: โRather we should thank God that such men lived.โ It is for younger generations, and others who know of Buckley without knowing much about what he was doing, that A Man and His Presidents is especially valuable.
Reprinted from Law & Liberty
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