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The GOP is Now the Party of LBJ . . .and McGovern, Waxman, and Gore
National Review Online ^ | May 12, 2006 | Deroy Murdock

Posted on 05/13/2006 12:38:16 AM PDT by neverdem

The party of Ronald Reagan has devolved into the party of Lyndon Johnson, George McGovern, Henry Waxman, and Al Gore.

 

On spending, LBJ’s Great Society seems greater than ever. Washington Republicans’ Spend-O-Rama famously included 13,997 pork-barrel projects that lodged like baby-back ribs in last year’s appropriations bills. President Bush’s $92.2 billion request for Iraq War and Hurricane Katrina funding has expanded to $109 billion after Senate manhandling. It now features such germane adornments as $6 million for Hawaiian sugar growers and $1.1 billion for private fisheries. Another $700 million would redirect train tracks that CSX Corp. invested $250 million to rebuild after Katrina; a replacement roadway then would link condos to Mississippi casinos.

 

In one sliver of good news, fiscal watchdogs enacted rules that should pierce the earmark culture that has burgeoned under House Appropriations Chairman Jerry Lewis (R., Calif.). That baby step aside, Congress still needs liposuction.

As Americans for Tax Reform estimates, Republican outlays between 2001 and 2006 have devoured the savings that a Democratic White House and GOP Congress generated last decade. In 1993, federal spending consumed 23.8 percent of national income, and then bottomed out at 20.6 percent in 2000. Six years later, that figure boomeranged to 23.8 percent. Absent the War on Terror, homeland security, and hurricane recovery, 80.1 percent of today’s spending propels old-fashioned, big government. 

 

“How large does the Republican majority need to be before Republicans start acting like the responsible stewards of taxpayers’ money we thought we were electing?” asked American Conservative Union chairman David Keene.

These expenditures include surprisingly generous poverty outlays. “Everybody knows” that Republicans finance tax cuts for millionaires by slashing social programs. False! Republicans reduce taxes and replenish poverty payments. As Heritage Foundation analyst Brian Riedl calculates, GOP-approved poverty benefits swelled 39 percent between 2001 and 2005. Temporary Assistance for Needy Families is the only major program trimmed, from $18.6 billion to $17.4 billion. Otherwise, housing spending is up 26 percent. Healthcare aid has grown 40 percent. Nutrition relief has risen 49 percent. Keystones of LBJ’s Great Society have prospered, such as food stamps: up 71 percent. Meanwhile, child tax credits exploded 1,389 percent. Overall, poverty expenses now represent 16.1 percent of the federal budget — a record. 

 

Despite such largesse, Democrats invariably accuse Republicans of swindling the poor. So, Republicans might as well embrace their notoriety and reduce, restructure, and repeal these programs.

 

The least the GOP can do is stop creating new entitlements. The darkest hour for Washington Republicans was their creation of the new Medicare prescription-drug benefit. The GOP Congress approved and President Bush signed this measure in late 2003 to purchase elderly votes in the 2004 elections. So, what did it cost to bribe seniors into re-electing Bush?

 “Overall, President Bush’s senior vote percentage increased from 47 percent in 2000, to 52 percent in 2004,” Heritage’s Riedl says. “This represents a gain of 976,000 votes.” The new benefit’s 75-year liability (or long-term “price tag,” for budget purposes) is $8.1 trillion. “We can calculate that politicians purchased seniors’ votes at a price of $8.3 million apiece,” Riedl reckons. “Not that it came out of their campaign accounts or personal funds, of course.”

 

On petrochemical policy, the GOP’s liberal-Democrat drag show puts the pedal to the metal.

 

Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist (R., Tenn.), flailing as gasoline sped past the $3.00-per-gallon mark, proposed to send motorists $100 gas rebates. This embarrassment recalled Sen. George McGovern’s 1972 presidential campaign pledge to hand every American a $1,000 “Demogrant.” Frist’s $100 checks lacked such sheer ambitiousness. They were small enough to enrage spend-happy Democrats and silly enough to embitter frugal Republicans. So, Frist slipped between the barstools and slammed flat on his fanny before abandoning this brainstorm.

 

Frist and House Speaker Dennis Hastert (R., Ill.), lately the Laurel and Hardy of Capitol Hill, yanked a page from Rep. Henry Waxman’s (D., Calif.) playbook when they demanded an inquisition into alleged oil-company profiteering. Maybe the CEOs of Chevron, Exxon, and Texaco meet Fridays for rounds of golf and illegal price-fixing. Or perhaps energy costs have been rising like helium balloons due to a robust economy, international instability, EPA-mandated gasoline recipes, stalled refinery construction, restrictions on extracting oil (or even spill-proof natural gas!) virtually everywhere (especially one mosquito-bitten corner of the Arctic Circle), and even 54-cent-per-gallon tariffs on imports of ethanol — which manufacturers struggle to produce, pursuant to costly, new, federal rules requiring gasoline-ethanol blends. Why not conduct urgent yes-no votes to solve these problems? Will “pro-driver” Democrats support regulatory relief and fossil-fuel production, or will they reveal themselves as forest-green eco-freaks? If Senate Democrats feel like filibustering against ANWR drilling, let them.

 

Meanwhile, President Bush resembles Earth-hugger Al Gore as he proposes hiking automotive fuel-economy standards. This is just what GM needs while it breathes with a respirator. Drivers and passengers also might find it harder to avoid injury in lighter, thinner cars that remain energy-efficient while collapsing more thoroughly in head-on collisions.

 

“It’s an open question whether Republicans today would exercise greater fidelity to conservative principles as the minority rather than the majority,” said ACU’s David Keene. He’s not alone among aggravated right-wingers. An April 28-30 USA Today/Gallup survey of 1,011 adults found 38 percent of Republicans more enthused about voting now than before, compared to 46 percent who are less so. Among Democrats, 50 percent are more enthusiastic versus 37 percent who disagree. (Error margin: +/- 3 percent.) For Democrats, it’s starting to smell like … victory.

 

How tragic that Ronald Reagan’s GOP has become the political equivalent of 1,000 cases of non-alcoholic beer: Pricey and pointless.

 — New York commentator Deroy Murdock is a columnist with the Scripps Howard News Service.


National Review Online - font>


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Editorial; Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: 109th; federalspending; govwatch; libertarians; republicrats; rinowatch
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1 posted on 05/13/2006 12:38:19 AM PDT by neverdem
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To: traviskicks

ping


2 posted on 05/13/2006 12:41:23 AM PDT by freepatriot32 (Holding you head high & voting Libertarian is better then holding your nose and voting republican)
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To: neverdem

GOP should rather be GOBBLE.


3 posted on 05/13/2006 12:51:14 AM PDT by taxesareforever (Never forget Matt Maupin)
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To: neverdem

Since President Bush has decided to impersonate President Johnson in running the U.S. Government into the fiscal toilet while showing stubborness and arrogance similar to LBJ, I have decided that I do not want anymore Texans or anymore members of the Bush family to be President of the United States.

Anytime we have a Texan in the White House, we get into wars, inflation goes thru the roof, and we always get screwed in the end!

John in Los Angeles.


4 posted on 05/13/2006 1:23:48 AM PDT by HARBER (CBS=COMMUNIST BROADCAST SCUMBAGS!)
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To: HARBER
we get into wars
The war came to us. The Islamists could care less who is in the White House.
5 posted on 05/13/2006 2:25:30 AM PDT by kb2614 (Hell hath no fury than a bureaucrat scorned.)
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To: neverdem

And what did all that spending buy them?

Funny how that works...


6 posted on 05/13/2006 2:42:08 AM PDT by DB (©)
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To: HARBER
You might want to check the facts.

WW2 was a fellow from New York, Korea was a fellow from Missouri, Viet Nam was a fellow from Mass. As for inflation, maybe you are not old enough to remember the fellow from Georgia.

This is the best economy just about ever. Low tax rates all the way around. People are eating well and doing just about anything that they want to.

Count you blessings, it could have been Gore or Kerry!!!!!!!!!
7 posted on 05/13/2006 3:06:15 AM PDT by Coldwater Creek ("Over there, over there, We won't be back 'til it's over Over there.")
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To: neverdem

If this is true, then the Democrat party is the party of Leonid Brezhnev, Joseph Stalin and Nikita Kruschev...(I know my spelling is bad)


8 posted on 05/13/2006 3:17:59 AM PDT by Recovering_Democrat ((I am SO glad to no longer be associated with the party of Dependence on Government!))
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To: neverdem

If the nation is doing so economically well, one wonders why all these programs for the needy are not only still needed; but, have to grow at a greater rate... Don't look at the palm, keep your eyes on the finger tips.. no that wasn't a card back there...


9 posted on 05/13/2006 3:30:04 AM PDT by Havoc (Evolutionists and Democrats: "We aren't getting our message out" (coincidence?))
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To: neverdem

What a pile of whining BS.

If Gore had been elected in 2000, our country would be in far worse shape by now.


10 posted on 05/13/2006 3:44:43 AM PDT by tkathy (The "can do" party can fix anything. The "do-nothing" party always makes things worse.)
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To: HARBER

2004 signup. What a shock.


11 posted on 05/13/2006 4:00:10 AM PDT by Stentor
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To: HARBER
I have decided that I do not want anymore Texans or anymore members of the Bush family to be President of the United States.

I'll second that. No more Clintons or Kennedys or other political clans either. They are globalists who believe in open borders and the government as the driving force of our society.

All you have to do is look at that chart and see how wrong people are who say that Gingrich failed in the Contract With America.

Despite their many flaws, the GOP in the Gingrich years was a Republican party that was enacting the Reagan legacy: lower taxes, lower spending, less regulation.
12 posted on 05/13/2006 4:42:42 AM PDT by George W. Bush
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To: HARBER

War expenses add greatly to those expenditures. And its a war we did not start. Your reasoning is sophmoric and lacking any kind of analysis.


13 posted on 05/13/2006 4:45:57 AM PDT by DarthVader (Conservatives aren't always right , but Liberals are almost always wrong.)
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To: neverdem
“It’s an open question whether Republicans today would exercise greater fidelity to conservative principles as the minority rather than the majority,” said ACU’s David Keene. He’s not alone among aggravated right-wingers. An April 28-30 USA Today/Gallup survey of 1,011 adults found 38 percent of Republicans more enthused about voting now than before, compared to 46 percent who are less so.

They've squandered conservatives' trust on this. Borders and illegals are hot right now and they need to firmly and irrevocably address the borders with a fence and a serious program to detect and expel the illegals. But this liberal tendency to spend and porkbarrel is the slow cancer eating at the guts of the GOP.

We need more Club For Growth candidates like Tom Coburn. Don't waste your money by giving it to the GOP.
14 posted on 05/13/2006 4:49:28 AM PDT by George W. Bush
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To: neverdem
The GOP keeps going liberal because the base says "where else are you going to go".

These Bushbots want me to hold my nose and pull the lever for these liberal Republicans. Wish they would spend that much energy trying to get the RINOs to go right instead.

Go Constitution Party for a change.
15 posted on 05/13/2006 4:50:20 AM PDT by liliesgrandpa (The Republican Party simply can't do anything without that critical 100-seat Senate majority.)
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To: neverdem

Only on FR can you find fact, from fiction.

Thank you for the article.

Fifty million people in America now on some type of assistance program.
I will not blame the President of the United States, he doesn't make the laws. However veto seems to be a lost word in his vocabulary.


16 posted on 05/13/2006 4:58:20 AM PDT by buck61
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To: neverdem

Time for a fiscally sane Conservative Party to be offered to the voters.


17 posted on 05/13/2006 5:07:37 AM PDT by kittymyrib
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To: buck61

Agreed. I think GWB is a Truman-like figure. The war on terror has given him a legacy of greatness. Domestically however, his policies have been terrible. His "compassionate conservatism" has essentially strengthened federal control over education, made it harder for struggling families to file for bankruptcy, and his tax reforms actually took money from people in middle-class tax brackets.

I think it's a sad end to the Reagan Revolution, that when the Republicans finally won control of all the branches of government, they returned to their Rockefeller roots. The GOP's southern flank has hung with the party in hopes for the day when they'd have control of all three branches of gov't and what did we get?

Instead of reducing government's size, we got two new government departments/agencies out of the deal. We had a Department of Defense that couldn't defend the nation--they had to create an entirely new department called Homeland Security. Then we got the pathetic TSA, where they took a bunch of low-paid, unmotivated airline security screeners and gave them federal positions so they can never be fired. These TSA folks let Ahmed and Mohammed board the plane for fear of doing racial profiling and they grope granny's brassiere.

The GOP in the Senate went weak-kneed on every major issue that might roll back and disable liberalism (for the sake of collegiality). They fail to enforce the borders, even with two departments tasked to defend the homeland. They're so afraid of ruffling feathers of potential "illegal" voters, they're considering amnesty for them in the hopes they'll convert to being Republicans. They ran away from the Pres' constitutional amendment to define marriage as being between a man and a woman for fear of losing the "Log Cabin" Republicans.

The GOP has failed to take on the Dems over ANWR and realistically reduce foreign oil dependency. They should squarely take the blame for gas prices, because merely announcing that drilling will begin would push down the price per barrel on the international markets.

And finally, abortion: the GOP has essentially redefined its practical position to "its an area where intelligent people can disagree." This allows them to put in candidates who they think can win, like Giuliani.

What's the point in winning if have to become Democrats to do it? If I'm throwing away my vote to the Constitution Party, I'll do that from now on. It's obvious that a conservative who votes Republican throws his vote away.


18 posted on 05/13/2006 5:40:37 AM PDT by gregwest
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To: kb2614

We didn't go to them like LBJ and Truman did. (VN KW)


19 posted on 05/13/2006 6:13:49 AM PDT by CommieCutter
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To: gregwest

I agree with everything but this.

"and his tax reforms actually took money from people in middle-class tax brackets".

I'm in the middle and owed for a long time, never changed my deductions and got 600$ back instead of owing 400. That's a 1000 dollar swing for me. And it's all been short-from.


20 posted on 05/13/2006 6:16:41 AM PDT by CommieCutter
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