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Politics : American Presidential Politics and foreign affairs -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Peter Dierks who wrote (14355)11/6/2006 12:51:23 PM
From: tejek  Respond to of 71588
 
Can’t Buy Me Votes

Why GOP spending failed to buy popularity.

By Brian Riedl

Spending restraint is sound policy but awful politics. That’s the conventional wisdom among a Republican congressional majority that, haunted by memories of the 1995 government shutdown and the demonization of former Speaker Newt Gingrich, views the electorate as various special interests selling their votes to whichever party offers the largest subsidies. As former Republican party chairman Ed Gillespie once reportedly told the Manchester Union Leader, the American people want big government and the Republican party has decided to provide it.

Accordingly, since 2001 federal spending has surged by 45 percent. GOP press releases exclaim “largest federal funding increase in history” for this or that program. And GOP Hill leaders — in addition to criticizing Democrats for not spending enough — distribute briefing packets urging lawmakers to brag about all the spending they bring home. Each budget-busting bill — from education and farm subsidies to Medicare drugs and highways — is sold as the final guarantor of a permanent GOP majority. Republicans opposing such spending are mockingly called the “minority caucus” by fellow lawmakers convinced that even minimal spending restraint would cost them the congressional majority.

Which begs the question: If runaway government spending is supposed to buy popularity, why has Congress’ approval rating sank to a 12-year low of 24 percent? Why do so many pro-spending incumbents face uphill reelection battles?

Lawmakers have remarkably little political benefit to show for one of the largest spending sprees in American history.

They increased education spending by a staggering 137 percent since 2001 in hope of buying the “soccer mom” vote. Instead, the percentage of Americans preferring the GOP on education actually dropped from 41 percent to 33 percent.

Then, lawmakers created an $8.1 trillion Medicare drug entitlement in hope of buying enough senior votes to cement a permanent Republican majority. Instead, President Bush received only 976,000 more senior votes in 2004 than in 2000. That translates to $8.3 million in future taxes for every new vote gained. And new polls show that seniors feel, at best, ambivalent about the drug entitlement in its current form.

The budget-busting 2002 farm bill or the pork-laden 2005 highway bill didn’t yield significant political payback either.

Even pushing the number of annual pork projects from 2,000 to 14,000 since 1998 hasn’t increased Congress’ popularity or re-election rates at all. However, Congress’ two leading pork opponents over the last decade, Rep. Jeff Flake and former Rep. Tom Coburn, were rewarded by seeing their own margins of victory widen in every successive re-election. Dr. Coburn later won a Senate seat.

Time after time, huge domestic spending initiatives have failed to provide the promised political utopia.

Republican lawmakers understood that a domestic spending spree would demoralize economic conservatives who consider spending a threat to the long-run sustainability of the prized Bush tax cuts. However, they assumed they could win more votes by appealing to more liberal voters who favor more education, anti-poverty, Medicare, highway, and agriculture spending.

That strategy failed to acknowledge that Democrats can always woo those voters by promising even larger spending increases. Democrats still accuse the GOP of shortchanging education despite the 137 percent increase. Sen. Ted Kennedy promised that “when we get [the Medicare drug entitlement] as a down payment, we're going to come back again and again and again.” Even record anti-poverty spending levels haven’t stopped the media from stereotypically portraying the GOP majority as mean-spirited budget cutters. Republican spenders can never outbid Democrats for the votes of big-government advocates, and any futile attempt to do so merely demoralizes small-government advocates. This may explain why even two-thirds of conservative voters disapprove of the free-spending GOP Congress.

Yet lawmakers continue to tout spending as political gold because most of their contacts are with lobbyists and a vocal minority of constituents demanding more money for their pet issues. Polls consistently show that a silent majority of Americans prefer a small government with lower taxes and fewer services over a larger one with higher taxes and more services. One recent poll revealed that, by a two-to-one ratio, Americans prefer spending restraint even if it means less pork and federal funds coming home. This silent majority is why the GOP’s “minority caucus” lawmakers continue to win re-election even while opposing most new spending. It’s too early to tell which party will triumph in the 2006 elections. But whoever wins should rethink the assertion that two more years of busting the budget will bring victory in 2008.

— Brian Riedl is Grover M. Hermann Fellow in Federal Budgetary Affairs in the Thomas A. Roe Institute for Economic Policy Studies at the Heritage Foundation.

article.nationalreview.com



To: Peter Dierks who wrote (14355)11/6/2006 12:56:04 PM
From: tejek  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 71588
 
So because the treasonous democrats make false claims and continue to make tham after they have been disproven making public the proof is stupid in your book.

False claims? Hardly. Your guys are incompetent. I've told you that repeatedly. You don't want to believe it.

US shuts down 'how to build a nuclear bomb' website

news.independent.co.uk

You are right, Republicans are stupid. Being smart would have been to take traitors making false claims about here not being any WMDs out and shot them. Is that what you want? You would have been missed.

You need to stop with your first statement in this paragraph. There is nothing else. You degrade yourself trying to come up with ways to denigrate the Dems. In fact, they are the superior party.