The
'Large Purpose' of Romney-Ryan
by
Patrick
J. Buchanan
Recently
by Patrick J. Buchanan: Last
Hurrah of Nixon's 'New Majority'?
"The success
of a party means little except when the nation is using that party
for a large and definite purpose," said Woodrow Wilson in his first
inaugural, 100 years ago.
The Republican
Party of Richard Nixon was called to power in 1968 to bring an honorable
end to the war in Vietnam and restore law and order to campuses
and cities convulsed by crime, riots and racial violence. Nixon
appeared to have succeeded and was rewarded with a 49-state landslide.
The Republican
Party of Ronald Reagan was called to power in 1980 to restore America's
prosperity and military might and halt her stumbling retreat in
the Cold War. He succeeded and was rewarded with a 49-state landslide
in 1984.
Should Mitt
Romney and Paul Ryan prevail, what would be the "large and definite
purpose" for which they and their party had been called to power?
Answer: Put America's fiscal house in order and restore the prosperity
the nation knew before the Great Recession.
Yet the only
path consistent with party principle to achieve this goal is by
imposing real pain upon an electorate that is less likely to reward
Romney-Ryan with a 49-state landslide in 2016 than punish their
party with a massacre of Republicans in 2014.
Recall: In
1982, before the Reagan tax cuts began their healing work, Fed Chairman
Paul Volcker's deep-root-canal economics – double-digit interest
rates to scour inflation out of the economy – caused a loss of 26
Republican House seats. In early 1983, Reagan was widely viewed
as a one-term president.
Should Romney
and Ryan prevail in November, they would face a situation as dire
as was Reagan's – with fewer policy options.
Consider the
20 percent income tax cuts Romney proposes. With present tax rates
generating revenue only 15 to 16 percent of gross domestic product,
a cut that size would explode a deficit that is already in excess
of $1 trillion for the fourth straight year.
Moreover, the
principal beneficiaries of those tax cuts would be Americans in
the 35 percent bracket, who would see their top rate fall to 28
percent. Someone earning $10 million a year in salary income could
get a tax cut of around $700,000 – a nice piece of change.
Romney suggests
he will pay for tax cuts by cutting deductions. But the three largest
deductions for most taxpayers are mortgage interest, state and local
taxes, and charitable contributions. And if the GOP is reluctant
even to discuss these cuts today, is it likely to enact them?
The Romney-Ryan
supply-side tax cuts had better produce a boom, and fast, because,
given the makeup of the media, they will be portrayed as a plutocrats'
raid on the U.S. Treasury.
Moreover, while
tax cuts produce only ideological angst on the left, any major budget
cuts must inevitably cause real pain.
For consider
the major categories of federal spending.
The largest
domestic programs are Medicare and Social Security. Pare back these
middle-class entitlements, and a President Romney will be at war
with AARP, tens of millions of seniors and an army of baby boomers
now reaching retirement age at a rate of 10,000 a day.
If Romney is
going to bring the budget even close to balance, he has to end U.S.
involvement in Iraq and Afghanistan and stay out of any new wars
in Syria or Iran. But a policy of no war where no vital U.S. vital
interest is imperiled would be seen as a moral abdication by the
democracy crusaders and a betrayal by the neoconservatives.
As for defense,
Romney has taken that off the table and would increase it to 4 percent
of GDP.
What about
education? The major items here are Head Start, Bush II's No Child
Left Behind, Pell grants and student loans. Has any president since
Sputnik jolted America awake ever cut back on education?
What about
infrastructure? Since the Interstate Highway Act of President Eisenhower,
when has federal spending for highways, roads, bridges, airports,
ports and mass transit ever been cut?
Among the major
poverty programs are rent supplements, food stamps, the Earned Income
Tax Credit, welfare and Medicaid. Would a Romney administration
that is slashing tax rates for the top 20 percent dare to cut programs
that benefit the working poor?
Only once in
the lifetime of Americans now living did the U.S. government slash
spending. Right after World War II, the feds' share of the U.S.
economy was cut by two-thirds, and all those dollars put away in
wartime savings came flooding out to buy the homes, cars, TVs, freezers,
and washers and dryers suddenly available.
What
would a Romney-Ryan administration do once in office?
A guess: freeze
federal spending rather than slash it. Retain the Bush tax cuts,
and pass the new Romney rates. Take a chainsaw to regulations choking
free enterprise. Tighten eligibility for federal programs. Cut federal
payrolls through attrition.
And pray it
all works, as it did for the Gipper not so long ago.
But however
it turns out, those 49-state landslides are history.
September
1, 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
The
Best of Patrick J. Buchanan
|