×

A Life For Liberty and Decency

History has its macros and micros. There are the major events and players, and there are also the lesser-known particulars and players who were equally essential to the final outcome. So it is with the modern conservative movement. There are the giants recognized by the under-40 crowd, but under them is a vast array of colorful characters and institutions that made it all possible.

History is fortunate to have Dr. Lee Edwards cataloging all of it. He has written or edited 25 books, including major biographies on Barry Goldwater, Ronald Reagan, William F. Buckley Jr., and Ed Meese, as well as numerous others about the movement. Now — finally! – he has written a book about himself. In a way, it’s his best yet.

“Just Right: A Life in Pursuit of Liberty” is correctly labeled a memoir, but that doesn’t do the author justice. It’s more than an autobiography; it’s another look at the movement. But this time, Edwards is in the thick of things. He’s no longer the academic covering the conservative movement as political history. He’s recounting the era from personal experiences. And having been at its core for six decades, while working with and for all of the major players, he understands it as well as anyone. This book is not about the movement’s leaders as much as it is about its soul.

Edwards discusses intellectuals like James Burnham, Russell Kirk and Whittaker Chambers, men who breathed life into the movement. He has worked among the writers like M. Stanton Evans, Vic Gold and Tony Dolan, the scribes who made the ideas sing. He has toiled alongside the activists like Terry Dolan, Howard Phillips, Paul Weyrich, William Rusher and the ageless Richard Viguerie, men who put the ideas into play politically. He has advised those who were subsequently elected, like Sen. Jesse Helms, Rep. Phil Crane and former Rep. Bob Bauman, with the mandate to enact it all.

He has been associated with (“awestruck by”) some of the superstars in Hollywood, like Loretta Young, Efrem Zimbalist Jr., and John Wayne. He has panhandled from titans of philanthropy like Henry Salvatori, Richard Scaife, Joe Coors and H.L. Hunt. He has known lovable scoundrels like Willmoore Kendall and colorful geniuses like Lyn Nofziger.

These were the men behind the man at the National Review. They were the men who elected President Ronald Reagan and then championed his cause. They were the Old Right, the New Right, the Moral Majority and the Tea Party. Edwards has seen and worked with them all.

Edwards worked on the Goldwater campaign of ’64 and tells colorful stories (How many people know that Buckley and others were banished as “ultra-conservatives”?). He consulted for President Nixon’s administration and aptly describes its demons. He takes the struggle for liberty overseas, with President Chiang Kai-shek in the Republic of China, President Vaclav Havel in the Czech Republic, President Lech Walesa in Poland and Pope Emeritus St. John Paul II in heaven, and then brings it all back home with his most heartfelt cause: the Victims of Communism Memorial Foundation.

——

L. Brent Bozell III is the president of the Media Research Center. Tim Graham is director of media analysis at the Media Research Center and executive editor of the blog NewsBusters.org.

Newsletter

Today's breaking news and more in your inbox

I'm interested in (please check all that apply)
Are you a paying subscriber to the newspaper? *
   

Starting at $4.38/week.

Subscribe Today