Whyever not? I was looking forward to an answer with some curiosity.
If this is all, I don't see why the ideas might not stand up to a bit of prodding.obviously, i am outnumbered here ....
"Conservatism" is an odd word to use for it. Most of the policies pursued by the right strike me as rather radical. We do have things in the past we've tried that came out broadly effective. A more "conservative" approach (in the sense of "preserving older features") would be to revive elements of the New Deal, Marshall Plan, and strong Antitrust legislation, that have proved effective in the past....and if you mostly talk with other leftists, you may come under the impression that conservatism is a fringe ideology, maybe at best adhered to by one in ten Americans...
Consider also that about 34% of the electorate voted for Biden, and only 31% for Trump (this is also only about 22.5% of the entire population of the United States). Not one in ten, but it's only a bit more than one in five, and that number may be expected to decline with time. Trickle-down economics has also proved to be broadly fictitious (lowering taxes on the wealthy does not appear to stimulate growth, and neither does irresponsibly cutting public spending, or wasteful military expenditure). The Reagan Revolution has been completed, and its results have not been kind to the general populace.
That 22.5% of the population is also not united by a single ideology — neither are the people who voted for Biden, but the Republican Party specifically has to rely on alliances of convenience between groups with little in common.
Judging by church attendance and increased acceptance of groups formerly marginalised, the Culture War was probably lost around 1998. The trend seems to be showing no sign of reversing. Even if there is another "Great Awakening", the young will probably practise any form of resurgent Christianity in ways that are radically different from how their predecessors would.