Krugman, Chait, and Frum call the “Libertarian Moment” a Load of Bollocks

By: Evan McMurray

Mediaite

While libertarians, a group that often feels misrepresented in mainstream political discourse, were largely happy with Robert Draper’s piece in the New York Times Magazine about their moment in the sun, it didn’t take long for other columnists to call the idea of a “libertarian moment” a load of bollocks.

 New York’Jonathan ChaitNew York Times’Paul Krugman, and The Atlantic’David Frum(stepping back from the brink) all blew raspberries at the idea that this particular cross-section of free market economics, liberal social views, and non-interventionist foreign policy was suddenly ascendent in American politics. The primary point all three pieces made: younger voters, who are supposedly ushering in the movement, are more supportive of government intervention than their elders. As Chait summed up: “That young voters actually favor ‘bigger government’ in the abstract is a sea change in generational opinion, not to mention conclusive evidence against their alleged libertarianism.”

Chait explicitly critiqued the data from libertarian magazine Reason as intentionally skewed to support the libertarian shift; in fact, Chait argued, most voters who boast to pollsters that they’re independent are just cranky partisans who fall back along ideological lines in the voting booth.

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