The Gathering Revolt Against Government Spending
By Michael Barone
PatriotPost.us
This month, three members of Congress have been beaten in their bids for
re-election -- a Republican senator from Utah, a Democratic congressman from
West Virginia and a Republican-turned-Democrat senator from Pennsylvania.
Their records and their curricula vitae are different. But they all have one
thing in common: They are members of an appropriations committee.
Like most appropriators, they have based much of their careers on
bringing money to their states and districts. There is an old saying on
Capitol Hill that there are three parties -- Democrats, Republicans and
appropriators. One reason that it has been hard to hold down government
spending is that appropriators of both parties have an institutional and
political interest in spending.
Their defeats are an indication that spending is not popular this year.
So is the decision, shocking to many Democrats, of House Appropriations
Committee Chairman David Obey to retire after a career of 41 years. Obey
maintains that the vigorous campaign of a young Republican in his district
didn't prompt his decision. But his retirement is evidence that, suddenly
this year, pork is not kosher.
It has long been a maxim of political scientists that American voters are
ideologically conservative and operationally liberal. That is another way of
saying that they tend to oppose government spending in the abstract but tend
to favor spending on particular programs. It's another explanation of why
the culture of appropriators continued to thrive after the Republican
takeover of Congress in 1994 and during the eight years of George W. Bush's
presidency.
In the past, rebellions against fiscal policy have concentrated on taxes
rather than spending. In the 1970s, when inflation was pushing voters into
higher tax brackets, tax revolts broke out in California and spread east.
Ronald Reagan's tax cuts were popular, but spending cuts did not follow.
Bill Clinton's tax increases led to the Republican takeover and to tax cuts
at both the federal and state levels, but spending boomed under George W.
Bush.
The rebellion against the fiscal policies of the Obama Democrats, in
contrast, is concentrated on spending. The Tea Party movement began with
Rick Santelli's rant in February 2009, long before the scheduled expiration
of the Bush tax cuts in January 2011.
What we are seeing is a spontaneous rush of previously inactive citizens
into political activity, a movement symbolized but not limited to the Tea
Party movement, in response to the vast increases in federal spending that
began with the TARP legislation in fall 2008 and accelerated with the Obama
Democrats' stimulus package, budget and health care bills.
The Tea Party folk are focusing on something real. Federal spending is
rising from about 21 percent to about 25 percent of gross domestic product
-- a huge increase in historic terms -- and the national debt is on a
trajectory to double as a percentage of gross domestic product within a
decade. That is a bigger increase than anything since World War II.
Now the political scientists' maxim seems out of date. The Democrat who
won the Pennsylvania 12 special election opposed the Democrats' health care
law and cap-and-trade bills. The Tea Party-loving Republican who won the
Senate nomination in Kentucky jumped out to a big lead. The defeat of the
three appropriators, who between them have served 76 years in Congress (and
whose fathers served another 42), is the canary that stopped singing in the
coal mine.
Will Republicans come forward with a bold plan to roll back government
spending? The natural instinct of politicians is to avoid anything bold. The
British Conservatives faced this question before the election this month.
When Britain was prosperous, they promised no cuts at all. When recession
hit, they were skittish about proposing cuts and mostly unspecific when they
did.
That may have been why they fell short on May 6 of the absolute majority
they expected. Now they're in a coalition with the third-party Liberal
Democrats, who proposed more cuts, and the cuts they've announced have been
widely popular. Boldness seems to work where skittishness did not.
Unlike the Conservatives, Republicans have no elected party leader. But
House Republicans like Eric Cantor, Kevin McCarthy and Peter Roskam are
setting up websites to solicit voters' proposals for spending cuts, while
Paul Ryan has set out a long-term road map toward fiscal probity. Worthy
first steps. I think voters are demanding a specific plan to roll back
Democrats' spending. Republicans need to supply it.
COPYRIGHT 2010 THE WASHINGTON EXAMINER
DISTRIBUTED BY CREATORS.COM