Ann
Romney Asks the Right Question
by
Patrick
J. Buchanan
Recently
by Patrick J. Buchanan: How
Bill Kristol Purged the Arabists
When Hillary
Rosen said that Ann Romney had "never worked a day in her life,"
it was among the better days of the Romney campaign.
For Rosen –
present whereabouts unknown – both revealed the feminist mindset
about women who choose to become wives and mothers and brought Ann
Romney center stage.
Before a Connecticut
audience recently, Mrs. Romney spoke of her reluctance to see her
husband pursue the presidency a second time and said she resisted,
until she got an answer to one critical question.
"Can you fix
it?" she asked Mitt. "I need to know. Is it too late?"
Mitt Romney
replied, "No, it's getting late, but it's not too late."
Yet Ann's question
lingers. Is it still possible to turn this country around? Or has
a fate like that of Europe become inevitable?
If one focuses
on the deficit-debt crisis, and what a president can do, the temptation
is to succumb to despair.
Consider. The
U.S. government spends a peacetime record 24 to 25 percent of gross
domestic product. Most of that is expended on five accounts: Social
Security, Medicare, Medicaid and other Great Society programs, interest
on the national debt, war and defense.
Now assume
the best of all worlds for the GOP. Mitt wins, and the party captures
the Senate and holds the House.
Would that
assure a rollback of the federal budget? And, if so, how?
As Romney is
committed to expanding the armed forces by 100,000 personnel, to
growing the Navy by 15 ships a year, from today's nine, to raising
defense spending to 4 percent of GDP from the present 3.8 percent,
defense spending would not be going down but up.
What about
interest expense?
Given the Federal
Reserve's present policy of holding interest rates near zero, the
only way interest on the debt can go – is up.
Medicare, Medicaid,
Social Security and the Great Society would have to sustain almost
all of the cuts if the budget is to move toward balance.
But if the
Republicans cut current benefits, they would antagonize 50 million
seniors already on Social Security and Medicare.
If they cut
future benefits, they will anger the baby boomers who are reaching
eligibility for these retirement programs at a rate of 300,000 a
month, 10,000 a day, and will continue to retire at that pace until
2030.
Would a President
Romney and Republican Congress roll back benefits for scores of
millions of seniors, raise the retirement age for Social Security
and Medicare, reduce funds for Medicaid, Head Start, Pell grants,
student loans, primary and secondary education, and shed federal
employees by the tens of thousands?
Republicans
argue that the corporate tax rate of 35 percent, highest among advanced
nations, and the personal rate of 35 percent should be cut. The
other piece of tax reform is the elimination of deductions and credits
so a lower rate on a broader tax base will yield the same or additional
revenue.
Looks good
on paper.
But today 50
percent of all U.S. wage-earners pay zero income tax. Will that
half of a nation reward a party that ensures that many of them,
too, contribute? Free-riders on the federal tax code are voters,
too.
Again, the
crucial question: Does the Romney Republican Party have the courage
of its convictions – to carry out a fiscal program consistent with
its conservative philosophy?
For when, ever,
has the modern GOP done that?
Richard Nixon
funded the Great Society. Gerald Ford bailed out the Big Apple.
George H.W. Bush increased spending and raised taxes. George W.
Bush gave us No Child Left Behind, free prescription drugs for seniors,
two wars, tax cuts and the largest increase in domestic spending
since LBJ.
Even Ronald
Reagan ruefully conceded that he failed to do what he had set out
to do in cutting federal spending.
Now, we are
assured that this generation of Republicans has come home to the
church and confessed its sins, and is prepared to face martyrdom
in the name of fiscal responsibility.
Well, perhaps.
Yet, if it
is difficult to see how the GOP advances toward a balanced budget,
it is impossible to see how President Obama does.
Would the party
of Nancy Pelosi and Harry Reid, triumphant, scale back programs
that are the pride of their party – Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid?
Would Pelosi, Reid and Obama cut the number of bureaucrats and beneficiaries
of federal programs, thereby demobilizing the unionized armies on
which they depend at election time?
When
FDR came to power in 1933, after his running mate, "Cactus Jack"
Garner, accused Herbert Hoover of taking us "down the road to socialism,"
the Federal government was spending 4 percent of GDP.
Today, it spends
24 percent. Under both parties, under every president since FDR,
domestic spending has moved in one direction.
Ann Romney's
question remains relevant.
Is the trend
inexorable? Is there any turning back? Is it too late?
June
2, 2012
Patrick
J. Buchanan [send
him mail] is co-founder and editor of The
American Conservative. He is also the author of seven books,
including Where
the Right Went Wrong, and Churchill,
Hitler, and the Unnecessary War. His latest book is Suicide
of a Superpower: Will America Survive to 2025? See his
website.
Copyright
© 2012 Creators Syndicate
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