cover image Compassionate Conservatism: What It Is, What It Does, and How It Can Transform America

Compassionate Conservatism: What It Is, What It Does, and How It Can Transform America

Marvin Olasky. Free Press, $25 (240pp) ISBN 978-0-7432-0131-5

""Compassionate conservatism"" is a phrase used by Texas governor and Republican presidential candidate George W. Bush, but he didn't originate it. Credit for that goes to his advisor Olasky, who, in his 1992 book The Tragedy of American Compassion, proposed that the needs of the poor and uneducated could be better met through the efforts of local, faith-based organizations than through a big, bureaucratic social-welfare machine. As Olasky explains in this manifesto, compassionate conservatism requires looking behind the overt problems of poverty, illiteracy and drug-addiction to address the structures that sustain them--they must ""bring civil society back to the inner city."" Olasky describes his travels across the country visiting faith-based local groups that have made a difference. The centerpiece of his tour is Indianapolis, where a coalition of churches, businesses and civic organizations has developed partnerships to transform inner-city neighborhoods block by block. Olasky, who edits the Christian news magazine World, argues that faith is an essential part of the process (and to those who object, he responds that the words ""separation of church and state"" do not appear in the First Amendment). He even proposes the creation of a White House office of advocacy for faith-based organizations imbued with ""the rock-like faith of someone who believes that Christ changes lives."" His partisan and sure-to-be-controversial primer opens with a foreword by Bush and closes with Bush's July 1999 speech defining compassionate conservatism, in which he promised, if elected president, to allow religious, as well as nonsectarian, groups to compete to provide services on federal, state and local levels. (July)