By John Berlau on 1.18.08 @ 12:08AM
He used it to pound away at the "anvil" of regulation that Washington wants to drop on the rest of the country. Ronald Reagan would be proud of him.
Mitt Romney's surprisingly decisive victory in Michigan kept him
in the race for the Republican nomination, but he wasn't the only
one Tuesday night to make a comeback. The contest also revived the
fortunes of another GOP politician whose message, many said, just
wasn't right for the times.
The other comeback kid was the late Ronald Reagan, with his
message of opposition to big-government meddling. With his back to
the wall after two stinging defeats, Romney ignored the advice of
pollsters and pundits and campaigned on the Reagan-era theme that
government is the problem. He even went after government policies
that experts said were untouchable: environmental regulations.
From auto plants to the Detroit Economic Club, Romney hammered
away at the "green" mandates that add so many costs to U.S.
carmakers. Railing against the hike in Corporate Average Fuel
Economy (CAFE) miles-per-gallon requirements for cars in the global
warming bill recently passed by the Democratic Congress and signed
by President Bush, Romney declared, "Washington has dropped yet another
anvil on Michigan with higher CAFE standards. And now it's
passively sitting back to see if the car companies can swim."
Washington's regulatory "anvil" made another appearance in a
speech Romney gave at a General Motors plant where 200
layoffs had just been announced. "I also believe Washington is
doing too much anvil throwing," he said. "The first CAFE program
was a huge burden on the domestic manufacturing of automobiles. The
next CAFE program promises to do the same thing, and what help has
been associated with it? It's almost like an unfunded mandate."
"Unfunded mandate"?! Washington "drowning" Detroit with
regulations? Didn't Romney read the new campaign playbooks that say
sharp attacks on government regulation no longer resonate with
voters?
AS NEW YORK TIMES house conservative David Brooks has
argued, in the 1970s, "normal, nonideological
people were right to think that their future prospects might be
dimmed by a stultifying state." Way back then, "federal regulation
stifled competition," and "government welfare policies enabled a
culture of dependency."
But today, voters know that big government is no longer a
problem. "Normal, nonideological people are less concerned about
the threat to their freedom from an overweening state," the
Times columnist proclaimed.
Nowadays, you see, ordinary folks think the IRS and other
federal bureaucracies are just as pleasant as punch. Brooks looked
at the Romney campaign and decided that Romney had "turned himself
into the last gasp of the Reagan coalition."
Michigan primary voters seem not to have read Brooks's memo.
(Maybe they thought it was still locked behind the late, lamented
TimesSelect firewall.) Bashing big government
may seem passe to Brooks and a few other Beltway conservatives, but
Michiganders thought it sounded great.
As Romney articulated Washington's roadblocks to freedom and
prosperity, voters nodded their heads in vigorous agreement, even
on supposedly untouchable areas such as global warming.
Romney attacked chief rival Senator John McCain not just for his
support of higher CAFE standards, but for the McCain-Lieberman bill
that would impose taxes and rationing on energy use from carbon
dioxide. In the Detroit Economic Club speech, Romney cited studies
from the Energy Information Agency estimating the bill would raise
electricity rates by 25 percent and gasoline by as much as 60 cents
a gallon and cost 300,000 U.S. jobs.
"Placing caps and taxes on the U.S. alone just drives
manufacturers to China and India, and does little more than make
Washington politicians feel welcome at the embassy cocktail
parties," warned the former Massachusetts governor, sounding a lot
like our 40th president.
TO BE SURE, Romney is not a free-market purist, and parts of his
economic program and rhetoric should be troubling to fiscal
conservatives. Most notably, the proposal he outlined in Michigan
to spend between $4 billion and $20 billion on research and
development to revive Detroit's fortunes.
But as a proxy for big government, the level of regulation is
often more important than spending. The government can spend, as
the cliche goes, like a drunken sailor, and the spending can have
distorting effects and increase pressure for tax hikes. But high
spending doesn't directly limit a person's ability to build a
business, partake in a "politically incorrect" indulgence, or seek
the best drug to cure an illness.
Regulation does all of these things, as well as mandating
wasteful spending by the private sector that diverts it from
productive, job-creating activity.
Moreover, campaigning against regulation can often pay a bigger
dividend than railing against abstract "earmarks." Since many
people have a particular government prohibition pet peeve, the
candidate that has a general anti-regulatory platform can
frequently capture these voters.
In 1994, Republicans captured the votes of everyone from
farmers and ranchers concerned about the broad reach of
the Endangered Species Act to bikers who didn't like mandatory helmet laws.
Regulatory reform was featured prominently in the "Contract With
America." When Republicans took the House, a slew of regulatory
reform bills were introduced, and a few of them passed.
In recent years, the GOP has downgraded regulatory reform as a
priority, even as the party got religion again on taxes and
spending. You won't hear a consistent message against
overregulation in a Republican stump speech even from some of the
most conservative politicians. They seem to fear the media painting
them as too pro-business or anti-environment.
YET IN MICHIGAN, Romney channeled Reagan and the Contract With
America to show how deregulation can still be a winning message. He
"found his voice" by going from a simple "change" agent with
business experience to a pointed critic of the way government
frustrates the productive sectors of the economy.
In New Hampshire, his message had seemed to be the standard line
of many former executives in politics to run government like a
business. In Michigan, his message more often was to just get
government out of the way of business. And at times, in his own
wonky way, Romney could really pair anti-regulatory sentiment with
a Reaganesque optimism about the ability of American workers.
"When we send...a Ford Mustang overseas, it's not just loaded
with accessories," he explained to the audience at the Detroit
Economic Club. "It's loaded with our excessive healthcare costs,
our excessive regulatory burdens, our excessive legal liability
burden, and the taxes paid by every single automotive supplier to
help put product into that car. You take off those burdens, and
let's show them how fast a Mustang will actually go!"
With this anti-regulation message, Romney won males, females, Protestants, Catholics, all
levels of education from high-school dropouts to postgraduates, and
all income groups above $30,000. And in an important sign for the
anti-regulation message in a general election -- no matter who the
candidates end up being -- Romney was only six points behind McCain
among the independents who voted in the primary.
As long as there is an overweening regulatory state, smart
bashing of government regulation will never go out of style.
topics:
Taxes, Education, John McCain, Business, Earmarks, Religion, Environment, Global Warming, Books, Law, NATO, Energy