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The Gray Area with Sean Illing

Avik Roy on why conservatives need to embrace diversity

The Gray Area with Sean Illing

Vox Media Podcast Network

Politics, News, News Commentary, Philosophy, Society & Culture

4.511.1K Ratings

🗓️ 14 February 2017

⏱️ 89 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Avik Roy advised Mitt Romney’s 2012 campaign on health care, ran the policy shop on Rick Perry’s 2016 campaign, and then worked for Marco Rubio after Perry dropped out. So Roy’s Republican credentials are pretty solid. But he’s aghast at the direction his party has taken in recent years. The question Roy asks of conservatives today is a profound one: what is it you’re seeking to conserve? Under Donald Trump, he fears Republicans are fighting to conserve the idea of America as a fundamentally white, Christian country. “Trump showed me that white identity politics was the dominant force driving the Republican grass roots,” Roy told the Atlantic.Roy, who recently founded The Foundation for Research on Equal Opportunity, believes conservatism believes is bigger than that — and in this podcast, he explains why, even as he clearly details the difficulties the movement faces moving beyond white identity politics. We also go deep into healthcare, a subject Roy and I have been arguing about for years. A few other topics we cover:-What he thinks Trumpism represents as a phenomenon-How he feels he’s dealt with his identity as a conservative as opposed to as a Republican-How the aftermath of 9/11 led him to abandon a “colorblind” outlook on race-His hope for a new type of reform within the conservative movement that might result in  “diverso-cons”-How the innovator’s dilemma helps explain the GOP’s current problems-Why many conservatives don’t spend much time thinking about healthcare as an issue, and what they could learn from progressives who do-His thoughts on setting price controls for medical procedures and other costs to consumers-Why he thinks AI doctors might change medical practice and costs in the not-too-distant future-His criticism of how people on the left see nonprofit institutions as inherently more beneficial to society than for-profit companies, and the implications that has for healthcare-Whether Republicans are prepared to really offer an Obamacare replacement, and if so, what it might look likeBooks:-Leah Wright Rigueur’s The Loneliness of the Black Republican-Jonathan Haidt’s The Righteous Mind-Rationalism & Politics and Other Essays by Michael Oakeshott  Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Transcript

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0:00.0

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0:27.8

The following podcast contains explicit language.

0:34.8

Hello and welcome to the other client show.

0:45.6

My guest this week is Ovec Roy, who I'm very excited to have on the show.

0:48.5

I've known Ovec for a number of years.

0:50.4

We've been arguing healthcare with each other since before Obamacare was even a thing.

0:55.8

He rose pretty quickly through the ranks of Republican policy walks.

1:00.0

He became an advisor to Mitt Romney in 2012.

1:02.9

He was a policy director for Rick Perry in 2016 and went over to Marco Rubio's campaign.

1:08.0

Then as Donald Trump took over the Republican primary and ultimately took over the party

1:12.0

and then the country broke with Republican party and founded a really fascinating new

1:16.2

think tank that is trying to create a conservatism that is more inclusive and more focused

1:20.6

around social mobility and equal opportunity.

1:23.2

That thing tank is called the foundation for research on equal opportunity.

1:26.9

We cover a lot in this episode.

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