The Press: Angry Voice on the Right

As a commercial publishing venture, National Review magazine is a dud. In its brief history, it has spent some $860,000 more than it has taken in. Its founder, Editor in Chief William F. Buckley Jr., 34, works for nothing, says that he had to resign from the Yale Club for "economic reasons." But by Bill Buckley's lights, National Review is nonetheless a spanking success: it has become the most notable U.S. periodical speaking for the far political right.

As of this week, celebrating its fifth birthday, National Review has a circulation of 31,913, placing it among the leading secular journals of opinion. National Review achieved that status against such veteran competitors as the New Republic (circ. 35,931) and the Nation (circ. 24,015), whose viewpoints place them at the other end of the political spectrum.

National Review is bossed by a brilliant young man who has all his life carried a torch as if it were a branding iron for what he calls conservatism. Bill Buckley is the son of a man who built a $100 million empire in Latin American oil. From his weaning, Buckley was immersed in conservative doctrine. At age six, Bill wrote an angry letter to King George V, demanding that England pay its war debt. As a Yale undergraduate, he advised the U.S. State Department to deliver an ultimatum to Russia: Either hold free elections in Czechoslovakia—or else.

Bill Buckley entered Yale in 1946 as a confirmed conservative and a Roman Catholic. He was soon appalled—and not the least of his talents is in being appalled —at discovering that his own values were unfashionable there. So, in 1951, Buckley produced a bestselling book called God and Man at Yale. It accused the Yale faculty, in sweeping terms, of teaching along anti-Christian and anticapitalistic lines. God and Man at Yale became a pro and con reference point for political eggheads of both the left and right.

After God and Man, Buckley, in company with his brother-in-law, L. Brent Bozell, wrote a book called McCarthy and His Enemies, an apologia for the late Senator from Wisconsin that was soundly denounced by many who had never taken the trouble to read it. This established Bill Buckley as conservatism's enfant terrible as well as the scourge of liberalism. National Review, a magazine that would provide him with a regular opportunity to play both roles, was the result. He established National Review as the only U.S. magazine that would "stand athwart history yelling 'Stop!' '

In its five years of life, Buckley has led National Review through a sometimes baffling intellectual maze. In 1956, one of its editors, James (The Managerial Revolution) Burnham, recommended President Eisenhower's reelection: "The least bad choice." In the same issue, another editor, William S. Schlamm, urged Eisenhower's defeat: "To liberate the Republican Party from the man who is destroying it." In 1960 the magazine has endorsed Richard M. Nixon, but with the back of its hand ("Who likes Nixon's Republicanism? We don't"), as the only alternative to the Democrats' John F. Kennedy.

Quotes of the Day »

Get & Share
HANY FARID, director of the Neukom Institute for Computational Science at Dartmouth, saying that the infamous photograph of JFK assassin Lee Harvey Oswald holding a rifle in his backyard would have been nearly impossible to fake, as Oswald alleged
For use in rail of Articles page or Section Fronts pages. Duplicate and change name as necesssary to distinguish.

Time.com on Digg

POWERED BY digg

Quotes of the Day »

Get & Share
HANY FARID, director of the Neukom Institute for Computational Science at Dartmouth, saying that the infamous photograph of JFK assassin Lee Harvey Oswald holding a rifle in his backyard would have been nearly impossible to fake, as Oswald alleged

Stay Connected with TIME.com