http://rawstory.com/08/news/2009/09/18/irving-kristol-godfather-of- conservatism-is-dead/ Irving Kristol, godfather of conservatism, is dead [This man, more than any other individual, made the GOP what it is today] Published: September 18, 2009 Irving Kristol, the political writer and publisher called the “godfather” of neo-conservatism, has died. He was 89. Editors at The Weekly Standard said Kristol died Friday in Washington. He had been a radical in his youth but eventually rejected liberalism. He co-founded an important conservative journal, The Public Interest, and wrote several books, including “Neo-Conservatism: The Autobiography of An Idea.” His son is the influential conservative William Kristol, editor of The Weekly Standard. More details follow. Political writer Irving Kristol dead at 89 Irving Kristol, writer and publisher known as godfather of neoconservatism, dies at 89 HILLEL ITALIE AP News Sep 18, 2009 19:39 EST Irving Kristol, the political writer, editor and publisher known as the godfather of neoconservatism whose youthful radicalism evolved into a historic rejection of communism, liberalism and the counterculture, died Friday. He was 89. His wisdom, wit, good humor and generosity of spirit made him a friend and mentor to several generations of thinkers and public servants, said the editors of The Weekly Standard in announcing Kristol's death on its Web site. He died of complications from lung cancer. Kristol was the husband of critic-historian Gertrude Himmelfarb and father of neoconservative editor and commentator William Kristol, an editor of The Weekly Standard. A Trotskyist in the 1930s, Kristol would soon sour on socialism, break from liberalism after the rise of the New Left in the 1960s and in the 1970s commit the unthinkable — support the Republican Party, once as foreign to me as attending a Catholic Mass. He was a New York intellectual who left home, first politically, then physically, moving to Washington in 1988. He was a liberal mugged by reality, his turn to the right joined by countless others, including such future GOP Cabinet officials as Jeane Kirkpatrick and William Bennett and another neoconservative founder, Norman Podhoretz. The influence of Irving Kristol's ideas has been one of the most important factors in reshaping the American climate of opinion over the past 40 years, Podhoretz said. He was a flagship in the network of think tanks, media outlets and corporations that helped make conservatism a reigning ideology for at least two decades, the vast right-wing conspiracy that Hillary Rodham Clinton would claim was out to get her husband. More than anyone alive, perhaps, Irving Kristol can take the credit for reversing the direction of American political culture, liberal commentator Eric Alterman wrote in 1999. Former Vice President Dick Cheney was a longtime admirer and former President George W. Bush, whose administration was heavily populated by neoconservatives, awarded Kristol a Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2002, praising him as a wide-ranging thinker whose writings have helped transform America's political landscape. Kristol himself would regard neoconservatism as a job well done, a generational phenomenon that was pretty much absorbed into a larger, more comprehensive conservatism. But the Iraq War and the poor economy badly damaged the right's unity and credibility over the past few years. With the inauguration of President Barack Obama, Kristol's son declared that the liberals were back in charge. All good things must come to an end. Jan. 20, 2009, marked the end of a conservative era, William Kristol wrote in The New York Times. Unlike such earlier advocates of the right as Sen. Barry Goldwater and William F. Buckley, whose National Review journal Irving Kristol found insufficiently analytical and 'intellectual,' most neoconservatives were not lifelong Republicans. They were former Democrats, often academics, who broke with their party over Vietnam, race relations and what they regarded as the breakdown of civic order. They shared the anti-communism of Buckley and others, but worried less about government spending than about moral and cultural issues, believing that people needed to change along with the system. If there is any one thing that neoconservatives are unanimous about, it is their dislike of the counterculture, Kristol once said. Ironically, neoconservative was not coined by a neoconservative, but is credited to socialist author-activist Michael Harrington, who used the term in a 1973 essay about Kristol and other former liberals. Active in publishing for more than half a century, Kristol wrote essays and reviews for The New Leader and Commentary; released several books, including Neo-Conservatism: The Autobiography of An Idea, and co- founded a seminal neoconservative journal, The Public Interest. He was a contributor to The Wall Street Journal, writing a series of essays in the 1970s that called on businesses to invest in conservative scholarship and counter the permanent brain trust of liberal politics. With funding from Joseph Coors, Richard Mellon Scaife and others, the right created such think tanks as the Heritage Foundation. Kristol himself was a fellow at a key think tank, the American Enterprise Institute, and at least two major conservative books, Jules Wanniski's supply-side manifesto The Way the World Works, and Charles Murray's anti-welfare Losing Ground, were published with Kristol's help. Kristol also taught at New York University, worked for several years as a senior editor at the Basic Books publishing house and in the 1950s headed the anti-communist magazine Encounter, which turned out to have been funded — without Kristol's knowledge, he said — by the CIA. Born in New York City in 1920, Kristol was at first similar to so many other children of Jewish immigrants — passionate about books and allied with the working class, a teenager during the Great Depression who saw around me unemployed men eager to work but finding no jobs. Under such circumstances, the notion of an economy planned by governmental authority seemed commonsensical, not ideological, he later wrote. At City College of New York, Kristol was bored in the classrooms, but fascinated and inspired by the unending debates and discussions of Alcove No. 1, a small clique of student leftists that included Irving Howe, who later founded the liberal magazine Dissent, and sociologists Daniel Bell and Nathan Glazer. All four would be featured in a 1998 documentary, Arguing the World. By his mid-20s, Kristol had already backed off his most radical beliefs. A member of the infantry in Europe during World War II, he was surprised by his sympathy for the military establishment and by his distance from his fellow soldiers, whom he regarded as thugs or near-thugs. My army experience permitted me to make an important political discovery, he wrote. The idea of building socialism with the common man who actually existed — as distinct from his idealized version — was sheer fantasy, and therefore the prospects for `democratic socialism' were nil. After the war, he returned to New York and was hired to edit Commentary, then a liberal publication, and contributed reviews on religion and philosophy and other subjects. Still disdainful of market economics, he was an anticommunist liberal who called Sen. Joseph McCarthy a vulgar demagogue, but added that there is one thing that the American people know about Senator McCarthy; he, like them, is unequivocally anti- Communist. In the mid-1960s, Kristol, Bell, Glazer and Daniel Patrick Moynihan founded The Public Interest, which lasted 40 years and was praised by New York Times columnist David Brooks for having more influence on domestic policy than any other journal in the country — by far. His reach kept expanding. In the mid-1970s, he acquired a powerful new champion: Cheney, then chief of staff under President Ford and an enthusiastic reader of Kristol's work. By the 21st century countless neoconservatives had become government and judicial leaders. So I deem the neo-conservative enterprise to have been a success, to have brought elements that were needed to enliven American conservatism and help reshape American politics, Kristol wrote in 1995. If I am, as is sometimes said of me, a cheerful conservative, it is because I have so much to be cheerful about. Kristol and Himmelfarb were married in 1942. Besides their son, they had a daughter, Elizabeth.