![]() October 2016 issue | |
| Executive Director | Curt Mills[1] |
|---|---|
| Categories | Editorial magazine |
| Frequency | Once every two months |
| Circulation | 5,000[2] |
| Publisher | The American Ideas Institute[3] |
| Founder | |
| First issue | October 7, 2002; 23 years ago (2002-10-07) |
| Country | United States |
| Based in | Washington, D.C. |
| Language | English |
| Website | theamericanconservative |
| ISSN | 1540-966X |
The American Conservative (TAC) is a bimonthly magazine published by the American Ideas Institute. The magazine was founded in 2002 byPat Buchanan,Scott McConnell andTaki Theodoracopulos to advance an anti-neoconservative perspective. It has been noted as the only conservative publication in the early 2000s to oppose theIraq War, publishing a string of articlesRalph Nader described as "the most devastating critiques of the neocons' lust for unlawful wars" of the era. It was later credited with puttingJ.D. Vance'sHillbilly Elegy "on the map" in a 2016 interview with Vance.
According to the publication, it exists to promote a form ofconservatism that opposes unchecked power in government and business, supports "vibrant markets and free people", and embraces "realism and restraint" in foreign policy.
The American Conservative was founded by Pat Buchanan, Scott McConnell and Taki Theodoracopulos[4][5] in October 2002.[6] The magazine took apaleoconservative character, aiming to counter theneoconservative positions of theNational Review andThe Weekly Standard. It was critical of the Bush administration and in particular of its invasion of Iraq.[6] According to the publication, it exists to promote aconservatism that opposes unchecked power in government and business, promotes the concept of thenuclear family, free markets, and supportsrealism and restraint in foreign affairs based on America'snational interests.[7]
In the first issue, dated 7 October 2002, the editorial by Buchanan and Taki stated that the new publication aimed "to ignite the conversations that conservatives ought to have engaged in since the end of the Cold War, but didn't." It continued that much of what then passed for conservatism was "wedded to a kind of radicalism – fantasies of global hegemony, the hubristic notion of America as a universal nation for all the world's peoples, a hyperglobal economy."[8] In the same issue, an article by Buchanan challenged theIraq War, asking "What comes after all the celebratory gunfire when wicked Saddam is dead?"[4] and the magazine has been credited as the only conservative publication to oppose the war.[9]
Until early 2005, Buchanan and Taki served as the magazine's editors, with McConnell as executive editor, while Taki was its publisher.[8][10] Kara Hopkins was the next executive editor.[11] In its early years, the magazine called for an amendment to the US Constitution to bansame-sex marriage.[8] Before the2006 midterm elections,The American Conservative urged its readers to vote forDemocrats: "It should surprise few readers that we think a vote that is seen—in America and the world at large—as a decisive 'No' vote on the Bush presidency is the best outcome".[12] Buchanan and Taki retired as editors, and Taki as publisher, in 2005, although Buchanan continued to write for it.[8]Ron Unz was the publisher in 2007.[13][14]
In 2010, Daniel McCarthy succeeded Hopkins as editor. In September 2011, the magazine introduced an editorial redesign of its print publication and in May 2012 a redesign of its website. In October 2014,Benjamin Schwarz, the former national and literary editor ofThe Atlantic, was named national editor of the magazine.[15] In November 2016,Robert W. Merry succeeded McCarthy as editor, with Lewis McCrary and Kelley Beaucar Vlahos as Executive Editors. After Merry's retirement in July 2018, W. James Antle III was named editor.[16] In April 2020, Johnny Burtka, executive director and acting editor ofThe American Conservative, said that the publication's ambition is to "becomeThe Atlantic of the right" and said its online page views had "grown significantly" under theTrump administration.[17]The American Conservative is a member of the advisory board ofProject 2025.[18]
Originally published semi-monthly, it was reduced to a monthly publication in August 2009 and, in 2013, a bimonthly publication.[19]
Largely reviled by many American conservatives following its founding due to its pacifist and iconoclastic positions, the magazine spent its early history, according toThe Washington Post, as "an unheeded voice in the face of indifferent or hostile elite opinion".[20] In subsequent years, the publication evolved into whatMatthew Continetti described as a "durable platform for the anti-war right"[21] and, by 2023,Vanity Fair reported that over "the last seven years, the Republican Party has grown to embody just about everythingThe American Conservative has ever wanted".[22]
In July 2016,J.D. Vance gave an interview toThe American Conservative about his bookHillbilly Elegy, which was later credited by theNew York Times'Jennifer Senior with launching the volume's success and putting it "on the map".[23]
In 2004, Peter Carlson wrote inThe Washington Post that for scathing attacks on Bush and the invasion of Iraq,The American Conservative might have the edge overThe Nation,Mother Jones, andThe Progressive.[9] In 2009,Reihan Salam,National Review editor, wrote that the publication had "gained a devoted following as a sharpcritic of the conservative mainstream".[24]
In 2012,David Brooks, columnist atThe New York Times, calledThe American Conservative "one of the more dynamic spots on the political Web" and said its "writers like Rod Dreher and Daniel Larison tend to be suspicious of bigness: big corporations, big government, a big military, concentrated power and concentrated wealth."[25] In 2014,Ralph Nader creditedThe American Conservative with demonstrating "the possibility of Left-Right fusion" and attributed to it "the most devastating critiques of the neocons' lust for unlawful wars". According to Nader, "The Nation magazine could easily carry most of its articles without skipping a paragraph".[26]
Contributors toThe American Conservative have includedHelen Andrews,[27]Andrew Bacevich,[28]Doug Bandow,[29]Pat Buchanan,[30]Andrew Cockburn,[31]Rod Dreher,[32]Paul Gottfried,[33]Leon Hadar,[34]James Kurth,[35]Christopher Layne,[36]Michael Lind,[37]William S. Lind,[38]Douglas Macgregor,[39]Eric Margolis,[40]Scott McConnell,[41]Robert W. Merry,[42]Rand Paul,[43]Mark Perry,[44]Scott Ritter,[45]Steve Sailer,[46]Paul W. Schroeder,[47]Benjamin Schwarz,[48]Roger Scruton,[49]Taki Theodoracopulos,[50]Ron Unz[51],JD Vance[52] andTom Woods.[53]