By David Hogberg on 1.9.06 @ 12:08AM
After DeLay, who? There's only one responsible choice.
For much of his career in the House, Majority Leader Tom DeLay
was a loyal soldier to the conservative cause. He kept the GOP
troops in line, delivered many votes for President Bush, and did a
superb job fundraising for his colleagues in the House. Although he
had become too comfortable with the trappings of power in recent
years, he took the honorable path over the weekend by deciding
against re-seeking his leadership post. Now the question is who
will replace him?
Given current circumstances, there is only one responsible
choice: Mike Pence. So far, Representative Pence has suggested that
he will not actively seek the office of Majority Leader. If so, his
colleagues must draft him.
The first reason that Pence should be Majority Leader is that he
has shown strong organizational skills. His leadership of the House
Republican Study Committee led to a much-needed reduction in the
rate of spending growth. Yes, the reductions were small. But given
the Beltway's addiction to budget fat, it takes ample guts and
skill to act as dietician.
Next, Pence is not caught up in the Jack Abramoff scandal,
unlike another potential successor to DeLay, Roy Blunt. Not only
did Blunt take donations from Abramoff, a New York Times
story reported that he was on an "eat free" list at one of
Abramoff's restaurants. Other documents show that some of his staff took
advantage of Abramoff's skyboxes. In fairness, there is no evidence
that Blunt or his staff did anything illegal. Yet it is the
appearance of impropriety that will carry the day in the media. By
picking Pence, the House GOP sends a message that it takes the
scandal seriously and wants to start afresh.
Perhaps most importantly, Pence has shown, unlike many leading
Republicans, that he has not succumbed to the temptations of power.
DeLay eventually fell victim to the desire to keep constituents
happy by spending gobs of money. This was most evident in his
boneheaded remarks in which he declared "ongoing victory" in the
effort to cut spending because there was "simply no fat left to cut
in the federal budget." Blunt and John Boehner (another leading
contender) show no signs of being any better. Looking at Blunt's
House website, one finds a review of the Medicare drug
benefit's progress and how Blunt delivered $21.7 million in research for Southwest
Missouri research projects. Boehner's website features
prominent links to No Child Left Behind, Medicare.gov, and
Hurricane Katrina and Rita aid. Pence's website highlights deficit
reduction.
Appointing a serious budget cutter like Pence will help the GOP
with its increasingly dispirited base. In a Wall Street
Journal op-ed late last year, Dick Armey stated:
In all my years in politics, I've never sensed such
anger and frustration from our volunteers -- those who do the hard
work of door-to-door mobilization that Republican candidates depend
on to get elected. Across the nation, wherever I go to speak with
them, their refrain is the same: "I can't tell a dime's worth of
difference between Republicans and Democrats." Our base rightly
expects Republicans to govern by the principles -- lower taxes,
less government and more freedom -- that got them elected. Today,
with Republicans controlling both the legislative and executive
branches of the federal government, there is a widening credibility
gap between their political rhetoric and their public
policies.
Armey then asks, "What will happen to Republicans if these
freedom-loving, grassroots activists don't show up for work next
fall?" An ominous question, given that a recent poll shows that on
a generic ballot, the public favors Democrats to Republicans by
49-36 percent.
The House GOP can turn it around. It has done so before. In the
wake of the volatile Newt Gingrich (and the disastrous attempt by
Bob Livingston to succeed him), the House Republicans chose Dennis
Hastert as their new Speaker. A low-key man who shunned the
spotlight, Hastert was exactly what the GOP needed to fix its
image. Now they need someone who has not been corrupted by the
Beltway. And that is Mike Pence.
David Hogberg is a senior research analyst at the
Capital
Research Center. He also hosts his own website, Hog
Haven.
topics:
Taxes, John Boehner, Federal Budget, Medicare