Conservatism is a commitment to maintaining ordered continuity, avoiding chaotic change while recognizing the need for necessary changes. It values coherence and stability over total disruption.
Ahmari defines the working class as those who rely solely on selling their labor power for wages, including precarious professionals like adjunct lecturers making $30,000 to $40,000 a year.
Capitalism, with its creative destruction and boom-bust cycles, disrupts social balance and ordered continuity, which are core values of conservatism. It generates inequalities in power and wealth that need to be addressed.
Ahmari sees Trump as aligning with the Eisenhower-Nixon tradition, which accepted the New Deal and recognized the necessity of labor unions and a regulatory state to maintain social order.
Ahmari sees tariffs as part of a Hamiltonian tradition of economic protectionism, which has historically been supported by both Republicans and Democrats. While tariffs alone won't solve all issues, they are part of a broader consensus on industrial policy.
Ahmari envisions a Republican Party that supports labor without making labor an adjunct of the party. He hopes for an independent labor movement that can influence both parties, breaking the current dynamic where labor is tied to the Democratic Party.
Ahmari believes that reducing identity politics and focusing on practical, win-win solutions like universal pre-K combined with subsidies for stay-at-home parents can create a bipartisan consensus that benefits both parties and the working class.
Ahmari's Catholic faith emphasizes class reconciliation over class abolition, viewing capitalism as a necessary but flawed system that needs balance through the countervailing power of labor to achieve social harmony.
Senator Hawley has been instrumental in bridging the gap between the Republican Party and labor, supporting policies like the PRO Act and intervening in strikes on behalf of workers, which has earned him the support of labor leaders like Sean O'Brien of the Teamsters.
Ahmari believes that the toxic influence of identity politics on both sides of the political spectrum has been destructive and must be toned down for a new bipartisan consensus to emerge.
Conservative politics and labor advocacy don't often go hand in hand, unless you are columnist Sohrab Ahmari.
Ahmari says conservative politicians have the chance to change material conditions for workers. And labor advocates have the chance to forge a new political path.