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Worse Than Drunken Sailors
NRO ^ | 5/17/02 | Stephen Moore

Posted on 05/23/2002 3:33:59 PM PDT by billsux

May 17, 2002 8:45 a.m.
Worse Than Drunken Sailors
Today’s government-spending pace would make Tip O’Neill blush.

Despite the fact that the Republicans control the White House, the House of Representatives, and 30 governorships, the nation is now in the midst of the biggest government spending spree since LBJ. Incredibly, the domestic social welfare budget has expanded more in just two years ($96 billion) under George W. Bush than in Bill Clinton's first six years in office ($51 billion).

Although many economists portray this surge in spending as a stimulus to growth, the opposite is true. The runaway federal budget, which is up nearly $300 billion in just the last two years, and the parallel hike in taxes and debt needed to finance this spending binge, is America's single most ominous domestic economic danger sign.

Governments can only grow by capturing resources at the private sector's expense. That's what's happening now. Over the past year and a half, government has been the single fastest growth sector of the economy. It has grown faster than construction, services, housing, and even consumer spending. In 2001 the recession-racked private-sector economy grew by a microscopic 0.5%. But there was no recession in government: its spending was up 6% for the year. For the first quarter of this year, data indicates that private-sector activity rose by 5% as the economic recovery has taken hold. But government's spending soared twice as fast. This pace would make Tip O'Neill blush.

Even more discouraging is the spending trend line. Every year since the Republicans first took control of the House in 1995, spending roadblocks have been further removed. Domestic spending actually fell by an impressive 3% in real terms in the 104th Congress (1995-96) when Republicans seized control of the House and Senate for the first time in 40 years. The next Congress raised spending by 4%, the next by 11%, and this one is on pace to raise the budget by 15%. All of this is reminiscent of the old Reagan quip that to say that Congress spends like drunken sailors is an insult to drunken sailors.

Sure, the Democrats in Congress share a big part of the blame. The spending spree has worsened now that Tom Daschle is running the Senate and that prince of pork, Robert C. Byrd, is ruling the appropriations process. But one only need look at the vote on the Farm Bill — a bill that will distribute million-dollar welfare checks to America's wealthiest farm businesses — to see that the pro-spending virus endemic in the Democratic party has spread to the GOP.

I've covered federal budget issues for nearly two decades. If the Farm Bill wasn't the most fiscally rancid legislation I have seen, it's certainly in the top three. Yet two out of three Republicans voted for it, and, worse yet, Mr. Bush not only signed it, he crowed that it would secure the "independence of the American farmer." Independence from what exactly? The free market?

The bill is only the first of many budget-busting, anti-enterprise spending bills that are racing toward the president's desk. The emergency military supplemental spending bill has become a Christmas tree for special interests and is $3 billion over budget. The energy bill, with its emphasis on tax credits for windmills and boondoggle oil-conservation projects, is a bill that only Al Gore could love. Congress will also soon send Mr. Bush a $100 billion bill to provide free prescription-drug benefits for seniors, and a $6 billion bill for baby-sitting subsidies. And the president says he wants $5 billion more for failed foreign-aid programs. All this comes after last year's education bill that will nearly double the Department of Education budget over the next six years and institutionalize a federal presence in our local-school system.

The immediate way to reverse the fiscal collapse in Washington is for Mr. Bush to start dusting off his veto pen. The energy bill, the appropriations bills, the prescription drug bill all should be rejected in the name of fiscal sanity. This president has no vetoes so far. The White House has been reluctant to wield the veto power because they see this as a huge withdrawal of scarce political capital. Wrong. History proves that strong presidents — from Roosevelt to Reagan — make strong use of the veto. Mr. Bush can make a powerful case for rejecting obese spending bills: They are not just economically wrongheaded, they weaken the critical war on terrorism by diverting scarce tax dollars away from our vital national-security needs.

Republicans wrongly believe that they can bank on a spend-and-elect model to secure their House majority and then capture the Senate this November. The opposite is likely: The current spending binge, on top of the president's steel tariffs and his signature on the anti-First Amendment campaign reform bill, may severely demoralize conservative voters and set the stage for an electoral surge back to the Democrats. After all, if it really is big government that the voters want, why not pull the lever for Democrats, who are not amateur, but major-league big spenders.

John Boehner, the savvy Republican from Ohio who was a major part of the Republican Contract with America revolution in 1994, recently lamented that "we Republicans seem to have forgotten who we are and why we're here." He's right. Republicans are suffering from a politically lethal identity crisis. If the budget bulge that we're now witnessing were happening under a Democratic presidency, Republicans would be howling in indignant outrage. If the tidal wave of spending isn't soon reversed, the Republican Party may soon discover that it is both redundant and replaceable.

— Stephen Moore is president of the Club for Growth. This article originally appeared in the Wall Street Journal on May 13, 2002.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Editorial; Government
KEYWORDS: budget; bush; congress; federal; libertarians
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To: Sabertooth
Hey, Saber! Uh.......you're kitty's running wild, thought I'd letcha know!
41 posted on 05/24/2002 1:31:45 AM PDT by MeekOneGOP
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To: Sabertooth
thanks for the ping!
42 posted on 05/24/2002 1:37:17 AM PDT by Ernest_at_the_Beach
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To: billsux
They may all have that feeling that there is soon to be a nuclear event somewhere in the world (take your pick-Pakistan/India?), so spend, spend, spend. Or maybe it's just because Congress is so close (Rep.-Dem.) that they are bribing like crazy for votes. No matter, it is LOW, and we are sliding into Never-Ending Socialism. Hillary will put the icing on the cake in 2008! Bye Republic!
43 posted on 05/24/2002 2:24:40 AM PDT by ChasingFletch
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To: billsux
Worse than.

44 posted on 05/24/2002 2:35:48 AM PDT by ppaul
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To: SteamshipTime
Vote Democrat, liberal Democrat. Start the revolution sooner rather than later.

I'm wondering now if that's even true. Clinton at least made some feeble attempts at welfare reform and even signed some bill on it, meanwhile Bush is throwing more money at social problems than is imaginable --he wants to entice more 3rd world immigration by people unable to succeed by promising food stamps to immigrants who fail, he wants the US taxpayers to provide a welfare program for all the people in the world now.

45 posted on 05/24/2002 5:37:20 AM PDT by FITZ
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To: Sabertooth
Thanks for the heads up!
46 posted on 05/24/2002 6:21:41 AM PDT by Alamo-Girl
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To: 68-69TonkinGulfYatchClub; PogySailor; oldsalt

47 posted on 05/24/2002 6:32:56 AM PDT by aomagrat
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To: billsux
BTTT
48 posted on 05/24/2002 7:36:30 AM PDT by Tauzero
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To: cutlass
Who ya gonna vote fer? Harry Browne? Lota good that'll do.
49 posted on 05/24/2002 7:39:35 AM PDT by Texaggie79
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To: poet
Bump!

g

50 posted on 05/24/2002 7:45:04 AM PDT by Geezerette
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To: billsux
You are all so ignorant about Bush and his policies. He is just trying to spend our assets on us before Mexico takes over. Give the man a break.
51 posted on 05/24/2002 7:50:16 AM PDT by gunshy
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To: aomagrat
Thank you for your service to our Country!

g

52 posted on 05/24/2002 8:14:41 AM PDT by Geezerette
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To: aomagrat
Where's the lumpia and monkey meat?!
53 posted on 05/24/2002 8:22:32 AM PDT by philman_36
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To: GATOR NAVY
Drunken sailors ping!
54 posted on 05/24/2002 8:23:10 AM PDT by philman_36
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To: philman_36
Where's the lumpia and monkey meat?!

The lumpia is at Via's, and the street vendors are grilling the monkey meat. I could sure go for a frosty San Miguel with ice crystals in it, a plate of lumpia and a 10 piso bag on monkey meat right now.

55 posted on 05/24/2002 9:14:19 AM PDT by aomagrat
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To: Sabertooth
   Thank you very much for the ping...

...now could you point that kitty-cat in the direction of D.C.? He looks likes he's ready to solve some of our problems...hehehe

56 posted on 05/24/2002 9:35:04 AM PDT by Le-Roy
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To: aomagrat
"As a Drunken Sailor, I can tell you that no one can buy more booze with less money, anywhere in the world, than a drunken sailor."

"Spending like a Drunken Sailor" is actually a misnomer. It only applied to the first night in port for me. After that, I was able to pace myself and return to the ship with a couple of bucks still left in my pockets.

The first night ashore though, I would walk into a bar and throw 30-days back pay in the air. What stuck to the ceiling, I would save. The rest of it that fell to the floor would go towards contributing to the local economy.

57 posted on 05/24/2002 10:54:51 AM PDT by Scuttlebutt
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To: aomagrat
The lumpia is at Via's...
I liked the ones served at The Beggar's Banquet the best and the beer always had ice in it.
A volcanic ash graveyard now.
58 posted on 05/24/2002 11:40:25 AM PDT by philman_36
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To: philman_36
I think the best liberty I ever had in Subic was right after the big ereuption. Sitting at tables out in the streets piled with ash from the roofs, the beer cooled with ice from who knows where cause there was no electricity, bars lit by candlelight and no a/c, constant earthquakes...the whole atmosphere was a blast to me.
59 posted on 05/25/2002 7:12:45 AM PDT by GATOR NAVY
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To: Askel5
BTTT
60 posted on 09/03/2002 3:26:35 AM PDT by Uncle Bill
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