by
Joel B. Pollak
Evan as RightOnline bloggers headed to the bars and the blackjack
tables, the words of pollster Scott Rasmussen at the conference’s final
dinner echoed in our minds. On the one hand, he explained, the vast
majority of Americans agree that free markets are better than
government-managed economies, and that we want to live in the kind of
society that limited government makes possible. On the other hand,
Americans are fed up with both parties, and neither presidential
candidate will emerge from this election with a mandate to pursue
sweeping changes--even though drastic changes are needed.
The challenge for conservative new media, Rasmussen predicted, would
be to shape messages that can reach the American people. Our society
always leads its politicians towards change, he said, citing the example
of the civil rights movement in the 1950s, and Americans are ready to
reduce the size of government--but the hard work will be articulating
that idea in terms to which people can relate. The political class will
not give up its power easily--and so conservatives should reach beyond
the political bubble.
Andrew Breitbart would have agreed. For Andrew, politics was shaped
by media, and media was, in turn, shaped by culture. Political battles
were important, but it was far more important to break down the walls
that the mainstream media had build around political discourse. And in
the long term, conservatives would have to confront a culture industry
at odds with the values, aspirations, and everyday reality of its own
consumers.
In the past few months, a theme has crept into tactical debates among
conservatives, and conservative bloggers in particular: “What Would
Breitbart Do?” Andrew was a man of such legendary courage that it is
easy to forget that he was often quite flexible in his tactics, based on
the circumstances of a particular story or political environment.
For example, Andrew never actually called for Democrat Anthony Weiner to resign from Congress, but he did call
on Republican Spencer Bachus to leave Congress because of his
involvement in--legal, but intolerable--insider trading. Andrew saw the
mainstream media as the enemy--yet he often relied on a individual
mainstream journalists to highlight stories that had begun (and might
otherwise have stayed) in the blogosphere.
The one constant in Andrew’s tactics was that he was provocative.
Andrew realized that it was necessary to create outrage--or ridicule--in
order to burst through the mainstream media censorship. When he first
encountered the Occupy movement, in October 2011, he spoofed it, wearing
a faux Che-Guevara t-shirt to a protest in downtown Los Angeles and
quizzing baffled demonstrators: “Capitalism: thumbs up or thumbs down?”
When Andrew met Occupy in February 2012, outside the hotel where the
Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) was being held, the
smile was gone. “Stop raping people!” he yelled at the crowd, evoking
outrage from the left--and forcing the media to notice, finally, the
vast number of sexual assaults that had occurred at Occupy camps.
Whatever tactics he chose, Andrew Breitbart’s strategic goal was
always to reduce the power of the mainstream media to act as political
gatekeepers for Washington, and as amplifiers for cultural Marxism in
Hollywood. That struggle, Rasmussen told a sobered audience, would
remain long after the ballots had been (re?)counted in November.
Big Government