Posted on 10/26/2003 9:40:12 AM PST by vannrox
he folks of Little Rock on May 5 got to see an odd spectacle. President Bush told a nearly packed house at the 2,600-seat Robinson Center Music Hall in downtown Little Rock how much the economy badly needs a tax cut as a shot in the arm. On the other side of town, in the state capitol, Republican Governor Mike Huckabee lectured a joint session of the legislature about the urgent need for tax hikes.
Huckabee is certainly not alone as a Republican governor eager to raise taxes, but his tax-and-spend fever has effects in Washington specifically on the voting record of Sen. Blanche Lincoln (D., Ark.), whom Huckabee may challenge in 2004.
Two months before, President Bush was in Florida before a small-business group, expounding on the need for tax cuts. That same day, on Capitol Hill, Rep. Pat Toomey (R., Penn.) introduced two tax bills one to repeal Bill Clinton's tax on Social Security benefits, and one to make permanent the income-tax reductions in Bush's 2001 tax cut.
Toomey, of course, is challenging Sen. Arlen Specter (R., Pa.) in the 2004 GOP Senate primary.
This is the story of two challengers, but it is also the story of two incumbent senators. Specter and Lincoln are both fiscally centrist candidates facing challenges ostensibly from the right.
Their Republican challengers are pulling them in opposing directions. Specter's opponent is legitimately from the right, and the senator's voting record is leaning ever rightward in response. Lincoln, however, faces a challenge from a Republican who has sacrificed his limited-government credentials. Not only is the pressure off her to keep taxes low, but he's given her room to stretch to the left.
Last Thursday night, on Bush's tax cut, Specter voted "aye" and Lincoln voted "no." Following the path of these two incumbent senators (both up for reelection next year) to these votes can teach Republicans an important lesson.
LINCOLN'S LURCH LEFT
In 2001, Blanche Lincoln was one of twelve Democrats to vote for President Bush's tax cut package. Not only that, she railed on the Senate floor to have the ten-percent bracket implemented immediately and to reform the Alternative Minimum Tax which was increasingly encroaching on middle-class workers.
Since the tax cut passed in 2001, Lincoln has sponsored a bill that would make permanent the elimination of the death tax.
But now her tune is different. Last Thursday, she voted against the tax cut, nearly sinking it. Also on Thursday, she voted almost the straight Democratic line on the slew of amendments that came to the floor. During Finance Committee negotiations earlier in the spring, she worked to pare the bill down.
This is the opposite of what one would expect: a Democrat moving to the left in an election year in a state won by Bush. We saw two years ago Max Baucus (D., Mt.), Max Cleland (D., Ga.) and Jean Carnahan (D., Mo.) all got behind Bush's tax cut in the face of tough reelection bids.
What's different in this case is fairly simple. Blanche Lincoln sees that she will likely be running against a tax hiker. Lincoln already has a record as a tax-cutter, and this year, at worst, she is holding taxes steady. Come campaign time, Gov. Huckabee is impotent to attack her for raising taxes and George W. Bush can't pull the magic here he did in a handful of states in 2002.
So Mike Huckabee's resistance to spending cuts costs not only Arkansas taxpayers, but taxpayers nationwide now have their purse strings controlled, to a degree, by a well-protected Blanche Lincoln.
ARLEN, BUSH's DARLIN'
Arlen Specter is about as a good a fiscal conservative as George W. Bush was a Yale student. Over the last decade, Specter's score with the National Taxpayers' Union averages between a C and a C-minus.
While he eventually got on board with the 2001 cuts, he did everything in his power to shrink them and he had some success. Bush started with a package to reduce Americans' tax burden by $1.6 trillion over the next ten years. What we got was $1.3 trillion.
Specter was one of five Republicans to vote for a class-warfare amendment almost wiping out the tax cuts at the top of the scale and expanding the breaks at the bottom. He was one of six Republicans who voted to preserve the death tax. On a handful of other liberal amendments, he joined his big-tax brethren.
Come 2003, his record indicates he feels the tax cuts he tried to pare down two years earlier were too small. He is fully supportive of the 2003 tax-cut package and resisted the push to limit the "growth" package to $350 billion over ten years.
It is common knowledge in Washington that Specter is moving right on all sorts of issues because he is facing a Republican primary next year against Rep. Pat Toomey (who has drifted to the right himself, since arriving in Washington).
Specter needs to court Republican primary voters in Pennsylvania, the bulk of whom are conservatives. Toomey's chances are slim (Specter's war chest is massive), but, regardless, he is doing good work pushing Specter to the right.
LESSONS FOR REPUBLICANS
The story of Lincoln and Specter is really the story of Republicans Huckabee and Toomey. On taxes, Toomey acts like a Republican. Huckabee, meanwhile, looks more like a Bill Clinton for the new millennium.
Toomey, in all likelihood, will lose next summer. The odds favor Lincoln in a Lincoln-Huckabee match-up. These outcomes would make the Senate a bit more liberal than it would otherwise be for the next six years.
But for the next 18 months, there is still important work to do. Toomey is doing that work forcing Specter to back a tax cut that will enrich Americans for the next decade at least. Huckabee, meanwhile, is failing miserably. By fighting for higher taxes Huckabee has given Lincoln the liberty to drift as far left on taxes as she would like and to vote against Bush's cut.
The lesson is not a new one, but it's one the establishment often tries to make conservatives forget: When Republicans field candidates who act like Republicans, there are benefits even if they don't win. When Republicans put up tax-and-spend moderates, the political battlefield is shifted a few steps to the left.
Tim Carney is a reporter for the Evans-Novak Political Report.
August 26, 2003, 9:00 a.m. |
'm flattered that every GOP Senate leader since 1981 has signed a letter in response to my recent article on Pennsylvania senator Arlen Specter thanks for reading, guys! But I'm also surprised they would describe Specter as "one of the best senators in promoting Republican values and policies." Has Sen. Dole forgotten that in 1986 and 1987 Specter was actually more likely to oppose President Reagan's policies than support them, according to Congressional Quarterly?
With Republicans like this, who needs Democrats?
Fortunately, we don't have to go back to the Reagan era to assess Specter's lifetime voting record, which has earned a dismal score of 42 percent from the American Conservative Union. Just a few days ago, the senator boasted of his "independence" from "the idealistic wing of the party" (according to this story in the Johnstown Tribune-Democrat). Substitute the word "principled" for "idealistic" and it's a pretty accurate statement.
The leaders, however, go beyond generalities and challenge two specific items in my article. First, they say an anecdote about Specter trading an appropriations vote for the promise of two Trent Lott fundraisers is "false." I'll begin by pointing to another story from the invaluable Johnstown Tribune-Democrat, in which Specter says the following in response to my reporting: "To be sure that there is nothing wrong with my memory, I called Trent and read the quotation." Apparently the story isn't so beyond the pale that Specter can dismiss it out of hand. I'll do it for him: I stand by my impeccably well-positioned source on this one. Senator, there is something wrong with your memory.
Next, the leaders claim the article is "factually incorrect" in saying that Specter is behind the judicial nomination of Leon Holmes going to the Senate floor without a recommendation. In this case you don't have to take it from me. Check out this analysis from the newsletter of a liberal group opposed to Holmes: "On May 1, the Senate Judiciary Committee voted (10-9) to send the nomination of Leon Holmes to the full Senate without recommendation. Instead of voting on his nomination ... the committee took the unusual step of moving the Holmes nomination without recommendation likely to address Sen. Arlen Specter's (R., Pa.) concerns." According to my sources, you can delete the word "likely" from that account.
The leaders call Specter a "team player." They are entitled to this opinion. Yet they are in fact the real team players, rushing to the defense of a worried incumbent who faces a serious and deserved primary challenge from conservative congressman Pat Toomey.
Yep...IOW, RINOs Suck...MUD
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