By most accounts, the Bush Administration believes “deficits
don’t matter.” Former Office of Management and Budget Director
Mitch Daniels expressed such sentiments, and supposedly Vice
President Dick Cheney — to the extent that Paul O’Neill can be
believed — claimed that “Reagan proved” that they don’t matter. It
is this type of thinking which has gotten Bush into some trouble
that could affect his re-election prospects
There are two ways to interpret the claim that deficits don’t
matter: economically and politically. For the time being, I’ll
leave the former to economists. Since it is an election year, the
relevant question is can deficits hurt a president’s reelection
bid? Many conservative pundits don’t think so. Typical is Ramesh
Ponnuru who writes, “Do deficits inflict political damage on the
people who get blamed for them?… I think the answer …
is no.” While that may be generally true, it is not always
true. The Bush camp seems to be forgetting 1992, when Ross Perot
rode the issue to a 19% finish in the election, possibly leading to
the defeat of Papa Bush. It may only take one eccentric billionaire
to rain on the Bush parade.
Or it might only take the Democratic presidential nominee
exploiting the deficit issue in the fall. Of course, all of the
Democratic candidates have big spending plans of their own, thus
diminishing their credibility on the issue. Yet the results in Iowa
and New Hampshire show that Democratic voters are not stupid —
they are not willing to let a loose cannon like Howard Dean take
the party off a cliff. Thus, they may be astute enough to support a
nominee who dumps spending plans in favor of deficit reduction if
it would mean taking back the White House. It might not be overly
difficult for the eventual nominee to persuade the Democratic
rank-and-file to accept such a plan: a recent ABCNews/Washington
Post poll showed that 52% of respondents disapprove of Bush’s
handling of the deficit.
The Republican base might even make the Democrats’ task easier.
For many conservatives in the GOP, the deficit is symbolic of
runaway government spending. A recent conference of the
Conservative Political Action Committee was beset with grumbling
about Bush’s out of control spending. At that meeting, talk radio
host Kay Daly claimed that the complaining has gotten worse over
the last year. “Bush has got to watch out,” she warned, “or
conservatives may stay home” in November.
PERHAPS KARL ROVE HAS GOTTEN the message. The recent budget
proposal released by the Bush Administration limits non-defense,
non-homeland security discretionary spending to 1%. That’s a good
start, but one that will likely prove ephemeral. The Fiscal Year
2005 budget is supposed to be finished on September 30, 2004,
barely four weeks before the election. Few things whet Congress’s
appetite for spending more than an election.
Yet there are other things that President Bush can do that would
both help him neutralize the deficit issue, and rein in spending in
the long-term. Given that the ideas come from conservatives,
adopting them would help him shore up that part of his base. Bush
should send a proposal to Congress that includes:
• Reforming the Budget Process. In the current
process, the budget must be due just a few weeks before the
election during election years. This undoubtedly increases the
pressure to spend, as members of Congress hope to shore up voter
support by bringing home the pork. Bush should propose switching to
a budget process that yields a two-year budget that must be
finished during a non-election year.
• Audit Reform. Rep. Pat Toomey has suggested
making federal agencies subject to annual audits. If an agency
can’t pass the audit — and there are many that cannot — it gets
no spending increase in the next year. That would give government
agencies considerable incentive to cut down on the waste, fraud,
and abuse.
• Sunset Federal Programs. Stephen Moore of the
Club For Growth has proposed that all federal programs should be
sunset every five years. They would then be subject to review to
determine if they merit continued funding. I would add that this
reform must stipulate that each decision on whether to continue
funding a program must be voted on separately. In other words,
Congress would not be allowed to muster support for continued
funding by bundling the decisions on each program into one
bill.
It appears that the Bush Administration assumed that the
Republican base would be content with a strong defense and tax
cuts. It is increasingly clear that was a miscalculation. Proposals
like those listed above could help him to shore up his base. They
would have the added benefit of putting the Democrats on the
defensive, requiring the eventual nominee to come up with his own
deficit reduction proposal. It’s not too late for Bush to right the
course on spending. Are you listening, Mr. Rove?