Opinion
Guest
Essay
The
77-Year-Old Book That Helps Explain the MAGA New Right
Dec. 13,
2025
By Laura
Field
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/12/13/opinion/trump-maga-new-right-weaver.html
Ms. Field
is the author of “Furious Minds: The Making of the MAGA New Right.”
More than
any other president in recent memory, Donald Trump seems uninterested in being
a president for all Americans. His hyperpartisan language (“They are sick,
radical left people”) makes this clear. So does his use of the levers of power
— his abuses of the pardon power, for example, and the extraordinary
transformation of the Justice Department.
But it
would be a mistake to see his approach as simply the result of a vindictive
president who swats away norms and embraces hardball politics. Mr. Trump’s
outsize persona has given cover to an extraordinary ideological radicalism in
the Republican Party. The excesses of the second Trump administration would not
be possible without the intellectuals who have gathered in the MAGA movement.
To really understand what is happening in the United States today, we must
understand the ideology and thinkers behind the MAGA New Right.
Mr.
Trump’s approach to governing almost exclusively for red America dovetails with
the closed philosophical mode of this group, which embraces radical
anti-modernism and tends toward moral and political absolutism. In this
melding, only one political party possesses truth and reality — and governs
accordingly. The MAGA New Right’s contempt for liberal democracy is rooted in
this alternate vision, and it rejects the various forms of pluralism and
tolerance that many Americans have taken for granted.
Many
supporters of the president understand themselves to be the vanguard of an
ambitious project that will continue to shape G.O.P. politicians and policy
long after Mr. Trump leaves office. Some names have become familiar, such as
Kevin Roberts of the Heritage Foundation, Patrick Deneen at the University of
Notre Dame and Yoram Hazony, an Israeli political theorist and a leading
advocate for national conservatism.
But
others are more obscure yet as important to understanding what’s happening in
the United States. One is Richard Weaver, who wrote a book in 1948 that
describes the basic contours of the New Right’s closed philosophical approach.
The title of Dr. Weaver’s book, “Ideas Have Consequences,” would soon become a
popular catchphrase among conservatives. It captures the spirit of the MAGA
mind and the counterrevolution that we see unfolding before us.
Dr.
Weaver didn’t have just any old ideas in mind: The ideas he was concerned with
were distinctively modern ideas, and the consequences of these ideas were
devastating. They had caused nothing less than “the dissolution of the West.”
Americans
might be used to hearing conservatives blame postmodernism and critical race
theory for social problems. Dr. Weaver, who died in 1963, took aim at a
philosophical concept called nominalism, the rise of which he traced to early
modernity. (Think of philosophers like Francis Bacon, Thomas Hobbes and John
Locke.) Nominalism involves the rejection of universal concepts and absolute
truths — including transcendental moral truths. Nominalists believe that truth
is embedded in the particulars of the world around us. There is no universal
objective moral reality as Plato and other philosophers believed and it does
not exist as an expression of the divine.
Dr.
Weaver insisted that nominalism was not merely wrongheaded; it was the source
of all our woes. In his introduction to “Ideas Have Consequences,” he called
the shift to nominalism evil and likened it to Macbeth’s seduction by “the
witches on the heath.” Like Macbeth, Dr. Weaver wrote, “Western man made an
evil decision, which has become the efficient and final cause of other evil
decisions.” By challenging the idea of universal objective moral reality,
modern man had succumbed to individualism, relativism, materialism, historicism
and politics as will to power.
In my
research on the MAGA New Right and in the countless hours I’ve spent in
conservative academic circles, I’ve heard this Weaver-esque refrain again and
again. It is hard to think of a single significant thinker of the MAGA New
Right who would disagree with his assessment of the ways in which modern
thought is inherently corrosive or who would dissent from his insistence that
we must restore some kind of transcendental moral orthodoxy to our politics.
But
conservative ideas have consequences, too. When Dr. Weaver argued that modern
ideas are evil, he helped legitimate the repression of anyone who thinks about
truth differently. When the thinkers of MAGA New Right suggest that only
conservatives — or as some put it, heritage Americans — have access to
America’s founding principles or that America is a Christian nation, they are
providing a justification for authoritarian actions on the part of the
government.
Take
immigration. Mr. Hazony argues that the nation-state, as a homogeneous cultural
entity, sets the true foundation of good politics. Despite being an Orthodox
Jew, he has promoted Christian dominance in the United States, arguing that
“the only thing that is strong enough to stop woke neo-Marxism, the religion of
woke neo-Marxism, is the religion of biblical Christianity.” These ideas, to
him, justify limiting immigration as a way to maintain cultural cohesion.
Or take
marriage equality. Many on the postliberal Catholic right are strongly opposed
to it and argue that it violates the true moral order. Adrian Vermeule’s book
“Common Good Constitutionalism” hands judges and other officials legal
arguments they could use to overturn Obergefell v. Hodges (which legalized
same-sex marriage nationwide), based on a conception of morality that he claims
is objective and true for everyone everywhere, including anyone who dares to
disagree.
Dr.
Weaver’s style of thinking even helps us understand what is happening at the
Justice Department. The thinkers of the MAGA New Right would perhaps admit that
the department is quickly becoming an extension of Mr. Trump’s will, but they
would probably argue that the president, whether he knows it or not, is acting
on behalf of deeper truths, principles and aims. Mr. Deneen has a phrase for
this: “using Machiavellian means for Aristotelian ends,” by which he primarily
means reorganizing America’s social order and “replacing the elites.” The
evocative phrase about “Machiavellian means” can also help us understand the
New Right’s approach to Mr. Trump more generally.
There is
nothing wrong or inherently illiberal about holding strong convictions that
rest on idealist, traditional or religious foundations. One reason Dr. Weaver’s
ideas are so appealing is that his way of understanding truth is intuitive and
common-sensical to many people. What could truth possibly be if it isn’t
transcendental?
But under
liberal and constitutional democracy, citizens are entitled to shape their own
conceptions of the world, as individuals and as people who exist in the thick
of our families, cultural traditions, religious practices and other
communities. This necessarily includes the right to question the ultimate
sources of truth and meaning in our lives.
Many
conservatives understand and appreciate this. They accept that the cost of
religious freedom is that they have to live alongside people with different
belief systems and values and in the midst of a rambunctious culture that
permits radical questioning of all kinds.
Mr. Trump
and Vice President JD Vance, the kingpins of the MAGA New Right, embody a
different form of politics. With particular ideas and a MAGA intellectual elite
behind them, they are seeking to dominate a nation and impose their politics on
those who don’t share his vision.
It is not
the model that America’s founders aspired to. That country is a liberal
democracy, and one of its major aspirations — and sometimes its achievement —
is that it allows people who have different orientations and belief systems to
live together in relative peace and freedom. That is the vision for our country
that we must strive to achieve.


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