William Allen Rusher (July 19, 1923 – April 16, 2011) was an American lawyer, author, activist, speaker, debater, and conservative syndicated columnist.[1][2][3] He was one of the founders of the conservative movement and was one of its most prominent spokesmen for thirty years.[1][2]
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Rusher was born in Chicago, Illinois in 1923. His family had not been especially political; his parents were moderate Republicans, and his paternal grandfather had been a socialist.[2] In 1930 the family moved to the New York metropolitan area. Rusher entered Princeton University at 16, where he was active in student affairs, especially debate, and majored in politics. After graduation in 1943 and wartime service in the Army Air Corps, he attended Harvard Law School, where he founded and led the Harvard Young Republicans and from which he graduated in 1948.[1] Until 1956, Rusher practiced corporate law at Shearman, Sterling & Wright, a Wall Street firm in New York.[1] He then served as associate counsel to the Senate Internal Security Subcommittee, under chief counsel Robert Morris, for seventeen months.[1][2]
In these years, Rusher was also active in New York state and national Young Republican politics, helping F. Clifton White to lead an alliance in these organizations.[2] He came to the attention of William F. Buckley, Jr., editor of the fledgling National Review, shortly after its founding in late 1955, when he wrote an essay for the Harvard Young Republican paper, titled "Cult of Doubt."
In mid-1957, William F. Buckley, Jr. hired Rusher as publisher of National Review.[1][2] At the magazine, he oversaw the business operations, but more importantly served as a link to the world of conservative and Republican politics. He held the rank although not the title of senior editor, and as such was a full participant in its internal deliberations. At National Review, he advocated that the magazine develop and maintain a leadership role in the conservative movement. In doing this, Rusher sometimes disagreed with Buckley and senior editor James Burnham. In his philosophy of conservative politics and his belief in the urgent need for an active and unified movement to pursue conservative politics, he was especially close to another senior editor at the magazine, Frank Meyer.
Rusher was an early mentor of Young Americans for Freedom, founded with his assistance in 1960.[1] He helped to found the Conservative Party of New York State in 1961, and the American Conservative Union in 1964-65.[2] He was a mentor to young conservative activists from these early years into the 1990s.
In 1961, Rusher worked with Clif White and Congressman John Ashbrook to form the nucleus of what became Senator Barry Goldwater's campaign for the Republican nomination for the presidency in 1963, known as "Draft Goldwater".[1][2][3] Goldwater's victory in the hard-fought nomination contest over New York Governor Nelson Rockefeller and the previously dominant moderate or "liberal" establishment in the Republican Party is generally acknowledged as the first stage in the conservative movement's rise to national power.[3]
Beginning in the late 1950s and continuing well past his retirement from National Review at the end of the 1980s, Rusher was a very active public speaker on college campuses and in other forums, where he defended and advocated the conservative position. In the early 1970s, he was the main conservative representative on a PBS television debate show, The Advocates. He was also a commentator on ABC-TV's Good Morning America in the late 1970s and a regular radio commentator in the 1980s. Throughout Rusher's career, he was known as an aggressive and exceptionally skilled debater.
In the mid-1970s, Rusher was among the most prominent advocates for a conservative third party, or as he called it "new majority party," that would replace the Republicans; he was also involved heavily in efforts to organize such a party.[1][3] He repeatedly and unsuccessfully urged Reagan, whom he had known since the late 1960s, to lead this effort agree to accept such a party's nomination.[3]
Although he was a "fusionist" conservative who believed in both small-government and socially-conservative positions, Rusher was greatly concerned with unifying the movement and keeping it unified. He believed that Ronald Reagan, whom he promoted as a possible presidential candidate as early as 1967 and in whose reluctant campaign for the Republican nomination in 1968 he had some involvement, was the ideal leader for this purpose. Rusher also believed that the Reagan presidency was the conservatives' greatest political achievement.
In terms of issues, he was heavily motivated by anti-communism throughout his career, was an outspoken opponent of the 1960s counterculture, and took a special interest in what he considered pervasive liberal bias in the news media. As an adult he was baptised and became a Traditional Anglican,[3] although his religious views rarely entered into his political discourse.
Rusher wrote five books: Special Counsel (1968), a memoir of his time on the Internal Security Subcommittee;[2] The Making of the New Majority Party (1975), in which he advocated the establishment of a new conservative party to replace the Republicans in the post-Watergate period;[1][2][3] How to Win Arguments (1981), a primer of debating techniques; The Rise of the Right (1984), a history of the conservative movement from the 1950s to the early 1980s, re-released in 1993 with an appendix covering more recent developments;[1][2] and The Coming Battle for the Media (1988).
Rusher retired from National Review at age 65 at the end of 1988.[1][2] The following year, he moved from New York to San Francisco.[2] In California, Rusher served actively as a distinguished fellow of the Claremont Institute from 1989 onward.[1] He also served as a board member of the conservative California Political Review, and was for many years the chairman of the board of the Media Research Center, an anti-bias organization founded and led by L. Brent Bozell III. In addition, Rusher was involved with the Ashbrook Center for Public Affairs, the Pacific Research Institute, and the Pacific Legal Foundation.
He was in the news during the hearings for the Samuel Alito Supreme Court nomination in 2005, when he allowed Senate staff members to inspect documents related to the Concerned Alumni of Princeton group, in which Alito was tangentially involved, in the Rusher Papers at the Library of Congress. Rusher retired from his newspaper column, which he had written since 1973 under the title "The Conservative Advocate," in February 2009.[1] After more than half a year of ill health, he died in April 2011.[1]