In too many ways, the Conservative label has been polarised to suit the unfolding narrative of political unrest in the Trump era.  A combination of Politics 106 lectures and a video article by the former Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper provided an Enlightening explanation of Modern Conservatism’s corresponding values with some left-wing perspectives.  The mass-produced narrative of racist red necks and pushy middle-aged white women eclipses the genuine concerns of hard-working people that struggle to make ends meet.

Modern Conservatism scrutinises the limitations of the neoliberal establishment and the progressive perception of globalisation. Pro-free-trade and immigration positions largely rest on unquestioning faith in the international system without considering its impact on the domestic populace. Liberal institutionalism arguably undermines the state actor’s significance by persuading states that redundant international mediations and cooperation solve domestic instability.  The emerging reality is the internationalism subordinates workers by serving the needs of bureaucrats and large business owners that thrive in the interconnected economic system. Their wealth is portable and thus are not bound to state decision making in the same way as the working class.

Arguably, conservatism is founded by a realist position because it seeks to reassert domestic obligations to globally-minded politicians. Stephen Harper observes that domestic workers rarely reap the direct benefit of free trade because it remains an idealized aggregate concept, not a concrete domestic reality.  Increased immigration drains citizens from income from the domestic market by outsourcing crucial jobs to developing countries where cheap labour can be exploited. Modern conservatism mirrors international Marxism as it seeks to protect domestic livelihood against the exploitative international capitalist system.

Their similarities are explainable by Andre Gunder Franker’s wealth systems theory, as internationalism disadvantages work with different political standings in the same fashion. Capitalists receive income by utilising trans-national wealth generation and third world labour standards. Domestic workers cannot sell their labour, and Western nations normalise their poverty with pre-dominantly tertiary sector economies. The pursuit of adding value ironically devalues the domestic market contributing to the creation of widespread poverty.

It is not the fault of migrant workers, but the capitalist system’s failure has added a multi-lateral dimension to the labour dilemma.  The liberal self-improvement narrative fails to address that labor mobility is not universal and varies between occupation. A butcher does not possess the same value in the international system as a consultant as their skill set, and costs are not bound to the domestic economy.  Thus, conservatism can be interpreted as a method of protecting domestic economies against an exploitative capitalist system that remains critical for small countries and rural areas.  Conservatism is not universally perfect in its social aspects; however, I agree with Stephen Harper that these concerns should be taken seriously and not dismissed by mass-produced media.

Stephen Harper: “Why Trump Won”, ( January 28, 2019, Prager University, URL:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UFWE2jl5mwA).

Thomas Gregory, “Global Politics”: Introduction to Critical Theories (28 August, University of Auckland, URL: https://canvas.auckland.ac.nz/courses/47609/files/5341895?module_item_id=958340)