Topic
Politics
Published on
September 2, 2025
Civitas
Conversations
Michael Lucchese on Understanding Reagan's Conservatism and Buchanan's Populism

The Cost of Conflict: White House and Human Rights

February 18, 2026
About this episode

Richard M. Reinsch II interviews Michael Lucchese about his recent Civitas Outlook article "Not-So-Beautiful Losers: How Conservatism Won the Cold War – and Lost the Peace."

In this episode of Civitas Conversations, Richard M. Reinsch II interviews Michael Lucchese about his recent Civitas Outlook article "Not-So-Beautiful Losers: How Conservatism Won the Cold War – and Lost the Peace." In it, Lucchese argues that figures like Samuel T. Francis and Pat Buchanan abandoned Reagan's principled conservatism in the 1990s, embracing what he calls "right-wing Marxism," which focuses on class warfare and grievances rather than the principles of the American Founding. He contends this shift toward populist extremism planted the seeds for today's polarized politics and calls for a return to Reagan's approach that appealed to Americans' better angels rather than their fears and resentments.Michael Lucchese is the founder of Pipe Creek Consulting, an associate editor of Law & Liberty, and a contributing editor to Providence.

All other episodes on

Civitas Conversations

Lina Khan's Continued Influence on the FTC

Ep16
April 8, 2026

Return to the Filibuster?

Following a rule change in the 1970s, the minority is now incentivized to use the filibuster more frequently.

Ep15
March 31, 2026

California Eats the Rich

History has a very clear answer to what "one-time" and "only the wealthy" mean in the long run.

Ep14
March 12, 2026

The Truth About Higher Education

Civitas Institute senior fellow Pano Kanelos joins host Richard Reinsch to discuss the truth about higher education.

Ep13
February 26, 2026

Join the newsletter

Receive new publications, news, and updates from the Civitas Institute.

Sign up

Ideas for
Prosperity

Tomorrow’s leaders need better, bolder ideas about how to make our society freer and more prosperous. That’s why the Civitas Institute exists, plain and simple.
Discover more at Civitas