It didn’t have to be this way, the group believed, and we set out to prove it by developing over the next several years a series of policy proposals addressing great public challenges, but in ways that emphasized traditional Republican themes – including marketplace incentives, private initiatives, decentralized power, streamlined government and broadly-based international engagement. Over time, most of Ripon’s early agenda (revenue sharing, welfare reform, a volunteer army, minority business enterprise, school desegregation, government reorganization, affirmative action, a new opening to China and other initiatives) was reflected in the policies of the Nixon administration.
But there was one set of policy concerns that came to define and motivate the Ripon Society more than any other – and that was a renewed commitment to the advancement of Civil Rights.
Among the members’ strong convictions was that Civil Rights was a matter on which the party of Lincoln should exercise particularly strong leadership. It was a part of the party’s DNA at the time, we thought, stretching back to its earliest days. It was an issue on which Democratic administrations through the years had been compromised by their strong dependence on southern Congressional and Electoral College support. Civil Rights was a cause that had been advanced in the 1950’s by Republican leadership on the Supreme Court of the United States – and enforced most recently by a Republican president. (And it would, in fact, soon be advanced much further, through 1960’s federal legislation which would draw more support from Republicans than from Democrats in the United States Congress.)
Ironically, however, Civil Rights also became the one issue which most clearly separated the Ripon Society from the nascent New Conservative movement as it emerged in the 1960’s and 1970’s.