Conscience of a conservative A rejection of destructive politics and a return to principle

Jeff Flake, 1962-

Book - 2017

Republican Senator Jeff Flake takes his party to task for embracing nationalism, populism, xenophobia, and the anomalous Trump presidency. The book is an urgent call for a return to bedrock conservative principle and a cry to once again put country before party.

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Subjects
Published
New York : Random House [2017]
Language
English
Main Author
Jeff Flake, 1962- (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
xi, 140 pages ; 22 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 139-140).
ISBN
9780399592911
  • Preface: To Stand Alone
  • Chapter 1. The Crisis We Face
  • Chapter 2. Questioning Power
  • Chapter 3. On Bad Information and the Threat to Democracy
  • Chapter 4. Conscience of a Conservative
  • Chapter 5. On Free Trade, Not-So-Free Trade, Populism, Nationalism, and the Collapse of What We Believe in
  • Chapter 6. How Did This Happen? (Our Faustian Bargain)
  • Chapter 7. Note to Selves: Country Before Party
  • Chapter 8. Dear World: Bear with Us
  • Chapter 9. Toward A New Conservatism
  • Acknowledgments
  • Bibliography
Review by Booklist Review

The junior senator from Arizona offers a critical (in both senses of the word) look at the Republican Party. Flake deems himself a true conservative, from the same soil as Barry Goldwater, who wrote his own manifesto titled Conscience of a Conservative. Flake is a Republican who believes that people should be free from government interference in their lives; that free trade is smart trade; and that there is no free lunch. But as much as this volume is paean to traditional conservatism, it is also a takedown of the Trump administration, which Flake believes embodies, in almost every possible way, the antithesis of conservative beliefs. Interspersed with a discussion of how conservatism lost its way, the senator goes through a litany of Trump's presidential actions that he (and, for that matter, Democrats) consider wrong-headed: the Muslim ban; the animus against Mexicans; the bombastic, often rude, speaking style. Flake wants decisions made on conservative principles, even as he acknowledges that President Trump is not a conservative. When it comes to solutions, the old adage easier said than done might also apply here. Though he states in a clear and forthright manner what is wrong with the current administration, news outlets report he has voted with it 95 percent of the time. Still, this makes for an enlightening read, well worth the time, and it is enhanced by the story of the Flake family history Mormons who settled Arizona. The price for all this honesty comes high. Trump supporter and billionaire Robert Mercer is pouring funds into a super-pac designed to bring down Flake.--Cooper, Ilene Copyright 2017 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.

PREFACE   TO STAND ALONE   I will start by saying that I regret having to write this book.   I regret it because its necessity is a sign that the American conservative movement, which has been a force for great good to our country and to the world, is lost. This book aims to describe how it went wrong, and why, and how it might correct course. Given the state of our politics, it is no exaggeration to say that this is an urgent matter.   Conservatives can hold no one else responsible for this. It is a crisis of our own making. The good news is that fixing American conservatism is both of vital importance to our civic wellbeing and eminently achievable. But to do so, we have to be honest about what has happened.   I am a committed conservative. That means that I believe in the power of conservative principles to transform lives, lift countries, alleviate suffering, and make people prosperous and free. I strongly believe that given the choice between free markets and free minds versus more government control over our lives, the United States will almost always choose the conservative path.   But the question has become: Will "conservatives" choose the conservative path? Or will we instead sacrifice principle to do what is easiest and most politically expedient? When it comes to the election of 2016, well, we already have the answers. As conservative principle retreated, something new and troubling took its place. Going forward, those questions remain open, the answers remain unclear, and the early signs are troubling.   I grew up on a cattle ranch in northern Arizona, where conditions were spartan and life was what you made it. That experience taught me the value of standing alone sometimes, and it has everything to do with why I am now writing this book. And for the ultimate example in standing alone, we conservatives owe a great debt to a towering figure from Arizona, Senator Barry Goldwater, who more than fifty years ago stood alone when it was extremely difficult to do so, and in so doing started a movement of conservatives that twenty years later would see the election of one of our greatest presidents, Ronald Reagan. That this book takes its name from Senator Goldwater's seminal book is an homage to both his fierce independence and his visionary leadership.   Goldwater's fight was for the soul of the country, and so, too, is ours. When he wrote this in his own time, he may as well have been writing it in ours: "Though we Conservatives are deeply persuaded that our society is ailing, and know that Conservatism holds the key to national salvation--and feel sure the country agrees with us--we seem unable to demonstrate the practical relevance of Conservative principles to the needs of the day."   The effect that Goldwater had on my state and on the way that Americans think about their relationship to their government cannot be overstated. It is our relationship to our government and the foundational institutions of American liberty that are now under severe stress.   That conservatism has become compromised by other powerful forces--nationalism, populism, xenophobia, extreme partisanship, even celebrity--explains part of how and why we lost our way. That we who call ourselves conservative have been willing partners in that compromise explains the rest.   It doesn't have to be this way. In fact, it simply cannot be this way.   Going forward from here, for Americans to have the benefit of conservative principles, we must once again have the benefit of truly conservative leadership. Unabashed, unafraid, unreserved conservative leadership. But almost two decades into the new century, we conservatives have suffered a crisis of confidence, which in turn has led to a crisis of principle. In the election campaign of 2016, it was as if we no longer had the courage of our convictions and so chose to simply abandon conviction altogether, taking up instead an unfamiliar banner and a new set of values that had never been our own.   That an enigmatic Republican nominee succeeded in becoming president resolves nothing in terms of the future of American conservatism. In fact, an enigma by definition is a riddle, and riddles are meant to be solved. We--as conservatives and as Americans--have a lot of solving to do, to restore principle and look to the future.   Politicians can be herdlike creatures, too often prone to taking the path of least resistance. I understand the impulse and have often sought that well-trodden path myself. I must say, it would have been much easier for me to have taken that path this time as well and fallen in line with most in my party. But in good conscience, I could not. The stakes, for the future of conservatism and for the future of our country, are simply too high.   Excerpted from Conscience of a Conservative: A Rejection of Destructive Politics and a Return to Principle by Jeff Flake All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.