The following article is written by Ignacio Ibáñez of Red Floridablanca and translated by Joshua Gregor.
On behalf of Red Floridablanca, I would like to thank the Acton Institute for translating and publishing this series of articles, which I had the honor to coordinate, memorate the 170th anniversary of the death of Father Jaime Balmes (Vic, Spain, 1810-1848).
Monument to Fr. Jaime Balmes at the cathedral of Vic
The articles by Alejandro Chafuen, Josep M. Castellà,and León Rivas published under the series that es to a close with this piece have distilled different economic, political, legal and moral aspects of Father Jaime Balmes’s thought (Vic, Spain, 1810-1848). But we would do little justice to Balmes’s thinking if we were not to stress also his ideas’ continued relevance in our own day. Let us therefore open the time capsule and see what treasured lessons and advice Balmes has for our politicians—particularly those in the making.
1. Principles and values
Government should appeal to the great principles of society, wrote Balmes. He continued: “[T]hose principles which are not of any one school, which are not new but old as the world itself, existing from eternity in the paradigm of all municated to societies like a breath of life…. Reason, justice, good faith: these are the words that government must write upon its flag.” Scholasticism shines through here, does it not? Spanish historian Marcelino Menéndez Pelayo said that Don Jaime memorized St. Thomas’s Summa. Balmes’s theses on the origin of civil power, its attributes and limits, as well as his defense of the right of resistance to tyrannical e from members of the Salamanca School such as Francisco Suárez; these scholastics laid the foundations of classical liberalism. Following Aquinas, Balmes insists on the need for legitimate power to be subject to law, and for law to be subject to reason. As if he were analyzing the crisis we face in Catalonia today, he also warns that transgressing (constitutional) norms involves “habituating peoples and governments to disrespect laws; it establishes habits of purely discretionary rule and forced obedience; this is tantamount to assuring that the country will continuously live with despotism or anarchy.” He concludes: “[T]o make it a principle that society is to be ruled by the will of man and not by the law is to establish a maxim from which tyranny is necessarily born.”
2. Pragmatism
In order to strive for mon good, Balmes explains, government and law should likewise be tied to reality, to actual human beings’ actions and interactions within a society. For instance, in the case of the Catalonian nationalist crisis of identity, which he predicted, Balmes sought a pragmatic solution. He was conciliatory while being clear about the facts—a good lesson for today’s politicians: “Without dreaming of absurd independence projects…without losing sight of the fact that the Catalonians are Spanish too, and that a very prominent part of the nation’s prosperity or misfortunes must necessarily be theirs; without giving ourselves up to vain illusions that it is possible to break the national unity begun in the reign of the Catholic Monarchs… Catalonia can nourish and foster a certain legitimate provincialism—prudent, judicious patible with the nation’s broader interests.”
3. Consistency
Palacio de las Cortes, Madrid.
In order to avoid abuses of reason and intellectual smugness, Balmes sought to ensure that theoretical principles are applicable in practice—in his definition of politics as the art of the practicable he anticipates Spanish statesman Antonio Cánovas del Castillo (1828-1897), and in his “epistemological humility” he anticipates the thinking of F. A. Hayek (1899-1992) and Karl Popper (1902-1994). Political ideas, discourses and deeds need to form a strong continuum if the objective is mon good. Thus, he criticizes political parties’ double standards and lack of consistency. Saying one thing and doing the other is taking voters for fools and undermining trust and cohesion. We can find numerous examples of this kind of contradictory and erratic behavior in today’s politics, particularly on the left. It is well-known, for instance, how the harshest critics of capitalism are often those who most enjoy a luxurious lifestyle.
4. Truth
Balmes tried to build bridges between Spanish moderate liberals and traditionalists after Spain’s bloody civil war (1833-1840). To do so, he stressed the importance of truth as pass of all action and therefore mended “considering all the facts, all the circumstances, both adverse and favorable” to find the best solutions to any political problem. His pragmatic approach does not lead him to utilitarianism. On the contrary, he insists on the active role that principles, morality and tradition should play in politics. At the same time, he believes in human progress and looks with hope to the development of science, without falling into utopianism or determinism. In a nutshell, Balmes is principled without being dogmatic, which helps him reconcile different political positions into an innovative intellectual synthesis—an unequivocal sign of a freedom-loving thinker.
5. Prudence
Balmes’s conciliatory approach does not stop him from being a harsh critic of changes and revolutions “with no discussion of a gradation that could influence ideas and behavior,” and no connection to social reality—mere fruits of pressure and influence from arrogant minorities who think they know better than anyone else what’s best for the majority of citizens. Such a critique is as valid in 19th-century Spain as it is in Western countries today. We demand immediate “big-bang” social and political changes, and dismiss incremental, well-thought-out and trial-and-error approaches—a suicidal trend pletely disregards human nature. The thinker of Vic does not oppose change, but he does lay down some conditions: “In every age, it is necessary that the men who are to direct society understand the nature of the spirit that animates it and what its tendencies are; and rather than recklessly insisting on fighting with the nature of things, they should try to remedy what is bad in them, and use and foster the good they hold. Everything should be done with slow and gentle action, proper to the age in which they live, always giving a wide berth to one of the principal agents in the formation of great works: time.” Edmund Burke could not have said it better.
6. Institutions
Balmes considered institutions a key element of a society’s stability. They are wisdom poured forth throughout generations, fertile soil for an ordered prosperity for mon good. Nevertheless, he has us consider the classic dilemma of government of laws versus government of men from another point of view, since “there are times and circumstances when the institutions themselves guide men; but there are also times and circumstances in which men have to guide the institutions. This is the case after a revolution, for then the institutions are too weak.” From a contemporary classical liberal perspective, such as that of Europe today, this could sound anachronistic. But let us think now of the institutions and serious crises that certain developing countries face, and questions will start to arise. Balmes does not purport to justify absolutisms or dictatorships—throughout his political writings he insists on the need to adapt to new times, on the importance of civil versus military power, and on the role of Parliament (Cortes), among other institutions. What he advocates is that the best people lead in difficult times (a certain elitism) and that “frank, calm and munication be established between government and peoples” so that there will be order, since “without order there is no obedience to the laws, and without obedience to the laws there is no freedom.”
7. Private property
Balmes gives special attention to another fundamental institution of open societies: the right to private property. For example, regarding the Cortes voting on taxes—that is, Parliament exerting control over the financial pressure the government puts on citizens—he notes that “it is one of the best guarantees of peoples’ prosperity, and a healthy check on envy, prodigality and the wastefulness of bad governments.” He added that “one of the most beautiful hallmarks of European society was that even from its birth it tended to guard against government appropriation of citizens’ property.” This raises at least two questions. First, do Parliaments still protect our pockets? Second, are citizens’ interests truly well-defended when their representatives negotiate debt ceilings, tax increases and the national budget, or are particular interests placed before the general interest?
On the 170th anniversary of Father Jaime Balmes’s death, let us in conclusion add three pieces of advice to these seven lessons given to politicians. First, be open and conciliatory: “Take the initiative and propose and implement, when possible, all the good that may exist in the opponents’ system [of thought].” Second, be optimistic: “Why can’t great and splendid days be in store for our homeland? Why can’t streams of light and life arise from the very blow that we bewail? So let us not fall into discouragement, or give ourselves up to excessive confidence.” And third, be hard workers: “For all great triumphs, there is a necessary condition that no man can refuse: work. May good ideas depend little on government support; may they depend much on your own strength.”
Ignacio Ibáñez is director for International Politics at Floridablanca.
(Photo credits: Carles Puigdemont, Wikimedia Commons; Enric, Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 4.0; Luis Javier Modino Martínez, Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 2.0.)