Conservative writer William Buckley dead at 82
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Writer and commentator William F. Buckley, the patrician intellectual credited with founding the modern conservative movement in U.S. politics, died on Wednesday at age 82.
Buckley suffered from emphysema over the past year and died early on Wednesday while writing in his study in Stamford, Connecticut, said Jack Fowler, publisher of National Review, the magazine Buckley founded in 1955.
Buckley influenced the views of former U.S. President Ronald Reagan and was a leading voice in the conservative movement that helped send Republicans to the White House in seven of the past 10 U.S. presidential elections.
"He influenced a lot of people, including me," U.S. President George W. Bush said from the Oval Office.
"He was so articulate and he captured the imagination of a lot of folks because he had a great way of defining the issues. It was erudite and yet a lot of folks from different walks of life could understand it," Bush said.
Buckley packaged his opinions with a charm and scholarly tone that made him a hero on the right, although some critics saw him as smug and pompous and perhaps even racist.
That the late historian Arthur Schlesinger Jr. called him "the scourge of liberalism," was said to have caused Buckley delight.
He could be pugnacious, as in a 1968 television debate with writer Gore Vidal when Buckley said, "Stop calling me a crypto-Nazi or I'll knock you in the God-damned teeth."
Although Buckley, a Roman Catholic, denounced anti-Semitism, he also believed in white superiority over blacks as late as 1961, said the author of the upcoming book "White Protestant Nation: The Rise of the American Conservative Movement."
Allan Lichtman, who reviewed Buckley's papers at Yale University, said Buckley defended apartheid in South Africa and that National Review editorials referred to white superiority.
"I pray every Negro will not be given the vote in South Carolina tomorrow," Buckley wrote in a private letter to Douglas Stewart dated October 10, 1961, according to Lichtman.
"This was the heyday of the civil rights movement," Lichtman said. "All of these racist views were being challenged. He may have changed that view. But as late as 1961 he was against measures of equality for blacks."
FOUNDER OF A MOVEMENT
Yet no one doubts his importance to conservatism. Lichtman said Buckley ranked second only to Reagan for conservatism's revival in the second half of the 20th century.
"He created the conservative movement. I don't think anybody else had the charm and talent to pull this off," said Fowler, the National Review publisher. "And it's a monumental achievement. He created a major political movement that has profoundly shaped America and the world." Continued...



