Pat Buchanan: The Noble Relic
by
John
Derbyshire
Taki's
Magazine
Has Pat Buchanan
been fired from MSNBC, or hasnt he? He hasnt been seen
on the channel since October, when his last
book came out. (I reviewed it for Takis Mag here.)
MSNBC president Phil Griffin said a month ago that Pat was being
kept off the air because of things Griffin found objectionable in
the book: presumably things such as Pats having lamented The
End of White America one of his chapter titles. A friend
who met Pat on January 27th reports that Pat denied having been
fired.
The MSNBC debacle
is one more attenuation in the slow fading of Pats public
career. He still has other TV gigs, but if MSNBC does not restore
him, he is unlikely to get a media contract elsewhere that gives
him as much visibility. Pat will have taken another step down in
his gradual departure from the public stage. The man is 73 and has
health issues. More decisively, large parts of the American public
including, obviously, Mr. Griffin see him as a relic
whose views are not so much shocking as incomprehensible, as if
a courtier of James
the First had appeared among us in doublet, hose, and ruff arguing
for the divine right of kings.
Ah, well. As
Pats close British equivalent Enoch
Powell famously observed, all political careers end in failure.
Pats career was, in its very American way, a glorious one.
The details have been laid out in a striking new biography by historian
Timothy Stanley: The
Crusader: The Life and Tumultuous Times of Pat Buchanan.
Stanley sensibly
omits most of Pats childhood and youth, which Pat covered
thoroughly in his own 1990 memoir Right
from the Beginning. By page 36 of The Crusader, Pat
is working for Richard Nixon. There follows a breathtaking 320-page
canter through US national politics toward the end of the 20th century,
culminating in Pats disastrous 2000 run for president under
the Reform Party banner. He won 0.4 percent of the popular vote.
The highest
point was Pats victory over Bob Dole in the 1996 New Hampshire
primary. It is still thrilling to read about:
At the Buchanan
office in Manchester, there was a riot. The media turned up from
nowhere and tried to break in. They pushed their way up the narrow
staircase, squeezing against the walls, waving boom mics
.At
the front was Larry King, shouting, Wheres Pat? Wheres
Pat? Pat was world news. He made the front page in London,
Tokyo, and Moscow
.This was the high tide of the Middle
American Revolution.
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the rest of the article
February
22, 2012
Copyright
© 2012 Taki's
Magazine
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