Posted on 07/29/2015 5:17:38 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
For anyone hoping that the next president will get serious about reducing the size and cost of government, the early days of the campaign have been disappointing, to say the least. The Democrats, of course, have been campaigning as if Greece were a model rather than a warning. But what else can one expect from a party that has moved to the left of Barack Obama? The real disappointment has come from Republicans who seem intent on returning to the big-spending ways of the George W. Bush administration.
Start with the candidate of the moment, Donald Trump. Trump has made it clear that government spending in his administration would be, as The Donald would say, yuuuge! Trumps answer to just about any problem facing the country is for the federal government to spend more money, which would be just fine because he would be the one spending it, and he knows how to do it right. For example, in the wake of the McCain war hero dustup, Trump penned an op-ed for USA Today promising to fix the problems with the VA hospitals. His solution: I will build the finest and most modern veterans hospitals in the world. Where would the money come from to build more hospitals? Trump doesnt say.
Trump opposes any cuts to Social Security and Medicare and Medicaid, for that matter. In April, at the New Hampshire Republican Leadership Summit, Trump criticized his fellow Republicans for proposing reforms of the entitlement programs that are bankrupting the country: Every Republican wants to do a big number on Social Security, they want to do it on Medicare, they want to do it on Medicaid. And we cant do that. Medicare and Social Security alone face more than $69.1 trillion in unfunded liabilities, but Trump insists that the programs can be saved without cuts. All these other people want to cut the hell out of it, Trump said of Social Security. Im not going to cut it at all. Im going to bring money in, and were going to save it.
Donald Trump has plans to fix Americas horrible infrastructure. Yes, this means more spending, but dont worry, because Nobody can do that like me. Believe me. Trump also wants to spend more on infrastructure. In the wake of the Philadelphia Amtrak crash in May, Trump blasted Americas horrible infrastructure and said: We have to rebuild our infrastructure: our bridges, our roadways, our airports. Yes, this means more spending, but dont worry, because Nobody can do that like me. Believe me.
Nor should we forget that in the past Trump has supported all sorts of cockamamie big-government programs, including a Canadian-style single-payer health-care system. One can imagine that such a program just might cost a little bit of money.
Even Trumps signature issue building a wall along the border with Mexico would cost a pile of money. Although projections vary widely, some studies have put the cost as high as $49 billion and we should note that current attempts to seal parts of the border have run far above estimates. And no matter how good a negotiator Trump thinks he is, Mexico is not going to pay for it.
So where would Trump get the money for all this new spending? Cutting back on immigration will not save nearly enough. (Besides, immigrants, including illegals, are actually a net plus for Social Security and Medicare in the short term.) Perhaps thats why Trump has been so open to new taxes. In the past he has called not only for new business taxes, but also for a 14.25 percent wealth tax on people with a net worth of more than $10 million.
Unfortunately, Trumps opponents have not been models of fiscal rectitude. For example, Mike Huckabee, who has been trying to match Trumps rhetorical flourishes, is also matching his commitment to not cut Social Security or Medicare. Nor should one forget that, as governor of Arkansas, Huckabee had one of the worst spending records of any recent GOP governor. He earned a final overall grade of D on Catos fiscal report card, and the Club for Growth says that he increased state spending by 65.3 percent three times the rate of inflation and he increased the number of state government workers by 20 percent.
Other Republican candidates have been better on spending, but only somewhat. For example, both Marco Rubio and Ted Cruz have been open to entitlement reform and have called for cuts in government spending. But when the rubber met the road, both of these senators voted against pairing increases in defense spending with offsetting cuts in domestic programs. Instead, they backed defense increases that would have added almost $40 billion to the deficit. (Although Cruz voted against the amendment to offset defense hikes, it should be noted that he ultimately voted against the budget resolution as a whole.) And Rubio has joined all the GOP candidates except Cruz and Rand Paul in pledging fealty to farm-price supports.
Jeb Bush has also brought up the need for entitlement reform and promised to be a budget cutter. Recently he pledged to cut the federal workforce by 10 percent within five years, by imposing a freeze on new hiring and replacing only one of every three federal workers who retire. This is a typical Bush proposal: a tiny step in the right direction, from a candidate who often seems temperamentally unwilling to push big ideas. And Bushs spending record as governor of Florida was decidedly mediocre. As Chris Edwards, Catos fiscal analyst, has noted: Jeb Bush was a prolific tax cutter, but he let spending rise quickly toward the end of his tenure. . . . Jeb was good on taxes, but apparently not so good on spending. On Catos fiscal report card, he started off earning As and Bs, but had fallen to a C by the end of his second term.
Chris Christie has made the need for entitlement reform a centerpiece of his campaign, but spending in New Jersey has gone up during his time in office, increasing 15 percent from fiscal year 2011 to fiscal year 2015. New Jersey also has the fifth-highest debt and unfunded pension liabilities per capita in the nation. And it has spent $5 billion in economic-development subsidies since Christie took office. Scott Walker has a decent but not unblemished spending record in Wisconsin (state spending increased by 15 percent from 2012 to 2015), but lately he seems to be taking fewer specific positions on issues than Hillary Clinton. John Kasich was a budget hawk in Congress, but as governor of Ohio he has increased spending for everything from Medicaid expansion to education to job training. Ohio general-revenue spending has risen 18 percent during Kasichs tenure. That leaves Rand Paul, who, as would be expected from a libertarianish candidate, has been a staunch opponent of government spending; however, he has seemed determined to talk about anything but spending during this campaign.
In short, the 2016 campaign is still waiting for a budget cutter. Thats not going to be Donald Trump. And, so far, it hasnt been anyone else either.
Michael Tanner is a senior fellow at the Cato Institute and the author of Going for Broke: Deficits, Debt, and the Entitlement Crisis.
If you read between the lines of this essay, Cruz is the obvious choice for anyone interested in shrinking the size of government.
Trump is popular because of what he says but I don’t believe that will translate into actual votes.
I think everyone recognizes something very rare in Ted Cruz.
That isn't cutting government, that's cutting headcount. If you shrink your workforce yet keep the same programs and regulations and agencies in place then all you've done is overload the people you have left. Shrinking government means doing away with more than just people.
A democrat cannot just turn off a lifetime of libetalism. Referring to Trump and aiming at all the freeper trumpeteers.
Sry liberalism
Cruz would be a great choice, but only if he catches on. There is time.
We will see.
Cruz is great. No one I speak with recognizes him. The media hates him. Brit Hume was spitting contempt for him the other day. In a country where about one tenth of people think while they’re watching the news and read only headlines, what’s going to happen? Trump will at least try to bring back the country. I don’t know maybe he’s wolf in —well— a bad hairdo
I guess men of character, integrity, honesty, morality, etc. are boring to most Americans now in the age of the Kardashians and Obama. Do we even know what we need anymore in a leader? Cruz should be at the top of the list. Americans are sadly lacking in discernment. Wave a dollar bill in front of their eyes and you have their hearts.
Unfortunately, it seems to me that Trump’s plan to “make America great again” requires Big Government.
Everything that Trump does is BIG. He will not speak about shrinkage,
Still, he is performing a needed service at this point in time.
I think of him as a strategy rather than a candidate.
Tanner forgets to mention that every project Trump takes on comes in on time and at or below estimates. I think Trump would actually get the waste and fraud out of the picture.
I also get the feeling he might try to get rid of some of the more egregious depts. like Education and EPA.
Cruz is fighting to keep the Export-Import Bank unfunded. It’s not much dollar wise but it’s a start. Seems like that should deserve a mention here.
The bible instructs us how to choose our leaders.
Here is a trustworthy saying: Whoever aspires to be an overseer desires a noble task.
Now the overseer is to be above reproach, faithful to his wife, temperate, self-controlled, respectable, hospitable, able to teach,
not given to drunkenness, not violent but gentle, not quarrelsome, not a lover of money.
He must manage his own family well and see that his children obey him, and he must do so in a manner worthy of full respect. (If anyone does not know how to manage his own family, how can he take care of Gods church?)
He must not be a recent convert, or he may become conceited and fall under the same judgment as the devil.
He must also have a good reputation with outsiders, so that he will not fall into disgrace and into the devils trap.
In the same way, deacons[b] are to be worthy of respect, sincere, not indulging in much wine, and not pursuing dishonest gain.
They must keep hold of the deep truths of the faith with a clear conscience.
They must first be tested; and then if there is nothing against them, let them serve as deacons.
In the same way, the women[c] are to be worthy of respect, not malicious talkers but temperate and trustworthy in everything.
A deacon must be faithful to his wife and must manage his children and his household well.
Those who have served well gain an excellent standing and great assurance in their faith in Christ Jesus.
1 Timothy 3:1-13
Ted Cruz is the only candidate that meets this criteria
Does Trump ever smile? I know it sounds superficial but I won’t vote for someone who looks angry all the time. Only liberals show that trait.
Money spent on the border wall or fence is worth it.
He has enthusiastically supported Obama and Hillary.
He has targeted a few conservative issues and said things that outrage the MSM but are music to the ears of some Americans.
He will eventually drive away the conservative base when, like Marla Maples, we find out that he's an untrustworthy fraud.
I cannot answer that, I am not a fan of the Trump.
RE: Money spent on the border wall or fence is worth it.
YES, if that were the only issue that counts. We have MANY others and we don’t know where Trump stands on these.
Now let’s not equate CHURCH leaders with the leaders of a country.
While those traits will be desirable in the leader of a country, the standards can be lowered a bit because if we used those as a criteria, Ronald Reagan himself would be disqualified ( He has a few liberal nutjobs among his children ).
“I’d rather be ruled by a just,competent Turk than an incompetent Christian.” ( Martin Luther)
I don’t believe this was meant for just Church leaders, but lets say you are right, then answer me this; Why would you want a man that is not qualified to hold the position of Deacon (I didn’t say holds, but is qualified to hold) in his Church to sit in the Oval Office?
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