Nwanevu presented the historical perspective: “The idea of conservative helplessness in the face of liberal culture has powered the right for generations: William F. Buckley Jr. began his long career as a crusader against liberals on college campuses; the Moral Majority fought against the depraved totalitarians it saw in Hollywood and the media. Until recently, culture war material sat alongside a fairly full economic policy agenda—dismantling the American welfare state, dramatically limiting the federal government’s capacity to rebuild it, weakening regulations, and destroying the labor movement. That’s an agenda that the right mostly succeeded in implementing—with the Democratic Party’s eventual assistance. But now perhaps most of the public believes the conservative economic project has been a disaster.” So what’s left for conservativism? Nwanevu thinks that “until the movement reaches a new settlement (or revives the last one) on where to go next, cultural resentments and anxieties will be the whole game—the thin tissue from which something passing for a policy agenda will have to be built.” This election season is the perfect time to follow Osita Nwanevu and the best investigative reporters, opinion writers, and cultural critics in America. Subscribe to The New Republic today. Sincerely, Kerrie Gillis, publisher Read Osita Nwanevu’s Cultural Resentment Is Conservatives’ New Religion |