The problem, as I see it, is that while Cheney may represent some parts of the conservative movement more aptly, and while he certainly satisfies the conservative macho archetype, he is, just like John McCain, just as ill-suited to represent the movement itself. Douthat makes the untenable claim that Cheney's "precisely the sort of conservatism that's ascendant in today's much-reduced Republican Party, from the talk radio dials to the party's grassroots. And a Cheney-for-President campaign would have been an instructive test of its political viability."
Not true. Maybe the conservatism of Rush, who is a Cheney acolyte and friend, and who pretends to be more socially conservative than he really is. But not at all the conservatism of Michael Savage, or the social conservatism of Laura Ingraham or Janet Parshall, or of Sean Hannity. Nor does Cheney quite fit in with the anti-immigration crowd.
Doubtless, Cheney as candidate would have had fewer problems with the base than McCain, in part because Cheney was associated with Bush and had fewer problems defending the concept of hard power on national security, which, for a while, knit the GOP together in the early part of the Bush presidency. But John McCain's national security credentials were above reproach, too.
This article available online at:
http://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2009/04/douthats-first-column-defining-real-conservatism/16782/
