If you want to see where MAGA is headed, look no further than this week's National Conservatism summit.
Kiera Butler at Mother Jones:
In a speech at last yearâs Republican National Convention, then vice-presidential hopeful JD Vance shared his philosophy of national identity. âAmerica is not just an idea,â he told the crowd. âIt is a group of people with a shared history and a common future. It is, in short, a nation.â As I wrote last year, Vanceâs speech electrified far-right corners of X, whose denizens rejoiced that contained within those clichĂŠd sentiments was evidence that the potential veep shared their opinions on immigration. âThis is one of the most important political questions facing America right now,â posted former Trump administration official William Wolfe. âAnswer it wrong, we will go the way of Europe, where the native-born populations are being utterly displaced by third-world migrants and Muslims. Answer it right, and we can renew America once more.â Vanceâs Republican National Convention speech wasnât the first time he had held forth on the theme of America consisting of a particular kind of people. Days before the convention, Vance made a similar speech at the National Conservatism Conference, an annual gathering that attracts right-wing intellectuals, nationalists, and the nationalism-curious. The crowd also leans religious. At that same event, Sen. Josh Hawley (R-Missouri) delivered a keynote titled âThe Christian Nationalism We Need.â
This week marks National Conservatismâs sixth annual conference, and judging from the speaker lineup and schedule, it promises to be its most politically charged. When this group began to meet, the conference talk titles were vague and sleepy. Back then, panels included âCutting Through the Noise on Big Techâ and âFive Myths About China.â Over the last six years, the conference has hosted various conservative stars, including media personality Tucker Carlson, Hungarian prime minister Viktor OrbĂĄn, Brexit leader Nigel Farage, and post-liberal theorist Patrick Deneen. National Conservatism âemerged as a guiding light of the MAGA movementâof the America First movement in general,â notes Ben Lorber, who studies Christian nationalism at the progressive think tank Political Research Associates.
This yearâs National Conservatism Conference appears to be less about abstract intellectual debates and more about policy and action, a kind of an IRL Project 2025 for the administration going forward. Session titles include âOverturn Obergefellâ and âFighting the Woke-Islamist Alliance on University Campuses.â This yearâs speaker lineup is also spicier: It includes former White House strategist Steve Bannon; Jonathan Keeperman, a far-right publisher whose Passage Publishing releases works that celebrate fascism; and Calvin Robinson, a firebrand Anglican priest who was defrocked earlier this year when he made a Nazi-salute-style gesture at a Michigan anti-abortion rally. Vance isnât speaking at this yearâs event, but other Trump administration luminaries are, including US Small Business Administration head Kelly Loeffler, director of the US Office of Management and Budget Russell Vought, and director of the National Institutes of Health Jay Bhattacharya. Sen. Josh Hawley (R-Missouri), a reliable fixture at these events, will also be there.
The conference website says it aims to bring together people who are devoted to âthe idea of the nation, to the principle of national independence, and to the revival of the unique national traditions that alone have the power to bind a people together and bring about their flourishing.â But behind those lofty goals is a more specific agenda. My colleague Isabela Dias wrote about last yearâs event, noting that âfor all the âowning the libsâ discourse, the attacks on so-called gender ideology, the harangues against identity politics, and the warnings of the ever-present specter of neo-Marxism,â the attendees ârallied themselves most fervently around anti-immigrant sentiment.â At this yearâs conference, that theme is again on full display, with one entire breakout session devoted to âThe Threat of Islamism in Americaâ and a speech titled âThe Case Against Birthright Citizenship.â As much as conference organizers may have been emboldened this year by MAGAâs rise to power, National Conservatism also appears to be influencing the evolution of the Republican party. A close look at the organizers reveals a religious-nationalist ideology that undergirds the conference and, increasingly, MAGA itself. The figures behind the National Conservatism movement champion the general idea of nationalism, but they have strong ties to a particular nationâand itâs not the United States. The conference is a project of the Edmund Burke Foundation, a Washington, DC, nonprofit founded in 2019 by David Brog and Yoram Hazony, that describes its mission as âstrengthening the principles of national conservatism in Western and other democratic countries.â Brog, a lawyer and former chief of staff for Sen. Arlen Specter (R-PA), was the executive director of the evangelical Christian Zionist group Christians United for Israel. Hazony, an Israeli-American philosopher, political theorist, and Biblical scholar, was a former advisor to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.
The Edmund Burke Foundationâs annual revenue is modestâjust $1.2 million in 2023âbut as investigative reporter Walker Bragman recently reported, it was launched with deep connections to the conservative movement. One early donor was the Thomas D. Klingenstein Fund, which kicked in $100,000. Its namesake is a powerful Republican donor who chairs the board of the Claremont Institute, a right wing think tank. Another major contributor is the Common Sense Society, which describes its mission as a âcelebration of the political, intellectual, and cultural inheritance which constitutes our shared civilization.â
[...] The vision of a single religion as the glue that holds a nation-state together is a major theme at this yearâs conference. As Hazony explained to Ezra Klein, âthe central place of Anglo-Protestantism in America, with a strong Old Testament taste, the English language, the common law.â Those ideas would certainly seem to resonate with conference speaker Nate Fischer, who runs a Christian venture capital firm called New Founding. Fischerâs firm oversees the Highland Rim Project, which seeks to build neighborhoods with Christian values in rural America, what its website describes as âthick communities that are conducive to a natural, human and uniquely American way of life,â places where âyour neighbors are people who seek a self-determinative lifestyle and a return to a more natural human way of living for themselves and their families.â Fischerâs National Conservatism talk is titled âBuilding American Institutions in the Digital Age.â William Wolfe, the former Trump administration official who tweeted approvingly about Vanceâs RNC speech, is scheduled to speak on âRecovering the Evangelical Political Voice,â a noteworthy topic given the recent decision by the IRS to allow churches to endorse political candidates. Earlier this week, he posted on X, âWe must reignite the Protestant spirit in America.â
Another speaker is Doug Wilson, senior pastor of Christ Church in Moscow, Idaho. Wilson, who says he is in favor of repealing the 19th Amendment and instead instituting a household-based voting system, is a self-proclaimed Christian nationalist. At last yearâs National Conservatism conference, his speech was one of the most strident, bemoaning the depraved state of American culture, which he blamed on secularism run amok. âIf we will not have the Appeal to Heaven flag,â he warned, referring to the Christian nationalist banner that made headlines last year when Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alitoâs wife, Martha, flew it over the coupleâs vacation home, âthen we are going to have the tranny flag.â Wilson told me via email that he is looking forward to the conference and  âmeeting like-minded folks and networking,â and also representing the âevangelical Protestant voicesâ that he believes are âunderrepresented in the conservative resistance to clown world.â
The NatCon Conference reveals where conservatism is headed, and itâs a scary vision.












