Classical Liberalism, (the set of ideas promoting liberty,
equality and free markets), was developed in Europe during the eighteenth and
nineteenth century. This political philosophy was a response to feudal European
monarchy and aristocracy. Its goal was to support the aims of a rising middle
class by extending voting rights, political representation, economic latitude
and freedom of speech to that class. Political agitation favoring Classical
Liberalism produced the intended result of eventually creating representative
governments in Europe, and the unintended result of inspiring working class
peoples to advocate for their inclusion in the political process.
When this political philosophy crossed the Atlantic to the
British Colonies, the results were different in form. Classical Liberalism
inspired the American Revolution’s opposition to monarchy. Its outcome was the
United States. This is where European and US paths diverge. Europe continued to
have an adversary to Classical Liberalism, in the form of its dwindling
aristocracy and entrenched monarchy, both of whom surrendered their grip on
government only by having their tenacious, resistant fingers slowly pried from
the wheel. Conversely, the United States after the Revolution had no such
opposition. In the words of Murray Levin, “the absence of a genuine aristocracy
and a reactionary medieval Catholic church advocating traditional European
conservative ideology of the brand of Burke or of De Maistre is a fundamental
fact of American history. The absence of a conservative tradition hastened the
triumph of liberalism and contributed to the totality of its victory. The
absence of Conservatism denied to Americans an alternative model to
liberalism…The speed and the sweep of that triumph fixed the liberal mold so
that the unfolding of American history is the unfolding of liberalism” (Levin,
p. 242).
During the examination of history, one must be careful in
defining the terms “Liberal” and “Conservative” to a contemporary audience: it
should be stressed that in western history, “Conservative” only meant upholding
the hegemony of monarchy and aristocracy; “Liberal” meant the political ideals
that oppose such a Conservatism as elucidated in the opening paragraph. That
said, however, there was an evolution that took place. Eighteenth and
Nineteenth Century Liberalism did evolve into today’s Social Liberalism, based
upon the principles of liberty and equality. One could hardly, using the
Enlightenment tool of reason, support liberty and equality only for the middle
class. A system which claims to support freedom and equality, but does so only
for the group that developed the notion, is inconsistent and hypocritical. In a
country where women and so many minorities, all recognize that the principle of
equality applies to them as well, it is inevitable that notions of Liberalism
would evolve to include their demands. Freedom of speech and representation
became stepping stones for a variety of social and political perspectives to be
heard. Our homegrown Conservatism which arose in reaction to these wholly
American developments, was never (at least in word) opposed to the
constitutional principles created as a safeguard against monarchy or
totalitarianism. When US Conservatives acted to suppress and censor groups
seeking freedoms, they never stated an opposition to the Bill of Rights; they
just acted in ignorance of its principles based on emotion-based prejudices
against the listed groups. The most ironic political occurrence is that
American Conservatives have been the most vociferous and repressive forces in
favor of the established Liberal doctrines during our two Red Scares in the
1920s and the 1950s. American Conservatives have supported free markets and the
Constitution, during Red Scare periods, using the same enthusiasm with which
they opposed the aforementioned groups agitating for their rights through constitutional
means. Classical Liberalism is such an ingrained part of American Democracy
that even those who claim to oppose today’s Social Liberals, support the roots from
which Social Liberalism developed. In today’s United States, both Liberals and
Conservatives are Classical Liberals.
Levin, Murray B. Political Hysteria in America. New
York: Basic Books, Inc., 1971.
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