By Quin Hillyer on 5.22.08 @ 12:07AM
If they don't take a stand against a certain bill, they just might.
The obscenity of a Farm Bill that President Bush is vetoing will
provide House and Senate Republicans a wonderful chance to stand up
and say "Oh Captain, My Captain!"
It was in the movie Dead Poets Society, of course, that
prep school boys betrayed their teacher played by Robin Williams --
whom they fondly referred to as "Oh-Captain-My-Captain" after the
Walt Whitman poem. As Williams entered the classroom for one last
time to pick up some personal belongings, under the stern gaze of
the school administrator now leading the class, one brave young
student stood up on his desk and pledged renewed fealty by saying
"Oh Captain, My Captain!"
Despite the rebukes and threats of punishments from the
administrator, other students, one by one, stood on their desks,
and thus stood up for principle, to pay due homage to their
captain. And as each one did, it became easier for another and
another and another to find the courage to do likewise.
In the case of the Farm Bill, the "captain" is definitely
not President Bush, nor is it John McCain -- although both
would benefit from Members of Congress rallying around them on the
issue, and the Republican Members themselves would benefit if both
Bush and/or McCain were politically stronger. But in this case, the
"captain" is principle itself, which far too many of GOP federal
elected officials abandoned in favor of what they thought,
mistakenly, was their own political self-interest.
On Capitol Hill these days, sometimes the very concept of
"principle" is tacitly denigrated as a loser's game, with the
notion that standing on principle is almost always and forever the
functional equivalent of falling on one's sword. But the truth is
otherwise, as Ronald Reagan showed: that rallying behind principle,
on behalf of principle, is the best way to get stronger and to win,
and win, and win again.
In the case of the Farm Bill, the animating principle should be
what it always should be for the Republican Party that Reagan
rebuilt, namely the Jeffersonian insistence on "a wise and frugal
Government, which shall restrain men from injuring one another,
shall leave them otherwise free to regulate their own pursuits of
industry and improvement, and shall not take from the mouth of
labor the bread it has earned."
Few laws enacted in the past quarter-century violate that
Jeffersonian standard to a worse degree than does this Farm Bill.
It's a bill that ought to be easy to rally against, both
substantively and politically.
LET'S EXAMINE THE politics first. For one thing, it's one of the
few bills on which lawmakers can take a conservative stand without
being blasted by the liberal establishment media. Newspaper
editorial boards on the right, center and left, including
the Washington Post, the Des Moines Register, and
even the New York Times, are virtually unanimous against
the bill, as are groups such as the National Wildlife
Federation.
For another thing, there are clearly more House districts that
represent constituencies that would pay for the Farm Bill than
there are districts that would benefit from the bill. Also, there
is the matter of the GOP as a whole trailing McCain in popularity
by more than 20 points. Anything Republican lawmakers can do to
hitch themselves to McCain's wagon, on a matter of principle, while
at the same time strengthening his reputation for effective
leadership, will make both him and them look good.
McCain, to his great credit, has had the guts to make a strong
stand against the Farm Bill, even going so far as to pen a column
against it for the Chicago Tribune. If either chamber of
Congress sustains Bush's veto after the overwhelming votes in favor
of the Farm Bill when it originally passed, it will send a message
that McCain has enough clout to change minds and votes, and also
revivify a conservative base that right now is as dispirited as it
has been in decades.
Conservatives right now have a losing mentality. They need a
victory to unify them, to give them reason to believe they can
achieve other victories, and to undermine the confidence of the
Left before that confidence becomes a self-fulfilling
juggernaut.
ON SUBSTANCE, the bill should be easy to oppose. As McCain wrote,
"The majority of subsidies in this proposal go to large commercial
farms that average $200,000 in annual income and $2 million in net
worth, and the bill allows a single farmer to earn more than $1
million before cutting subsidies."
And it contains "$5 billion for direct payments each year to
farmers, regardless of whether they grow anything" -- including,
McCain could have noted, people who live nowhere near the "farms"
they own.
Thus, opponents could make hay by calling it the "Manhattan
Millionaire's Farm Bill," and could note, as the Washington
Examiner did, that "those subsidies will come from tax
dollars confiscated from millions of working families of four
making, say, $35,000. How is that fair?"
The Examiner also noted "a provision to 'sell' national
forest land, necessitating a shifting of the Appalachian Trail, to
benefit a Vermont ski resort." At an American Spectator
Newsmakers' Breakfast on Wednesday, White House Budget Director Jim
Nussle called that bit of local-interest feather-nesting the "Trail
to Nowhere" clause.
The absurd sugar subsidies in the bill will add billions of
dollars to consumer costs each year. The continued ethanol
subsidies (of several varieties) will continue exacerbating the
global food shortage while actually harming the environment. The
special-interest pork and tax breaks -- $250 million for a timber
company in Montana (the so-called "forest fish" provision: Don't
even ask!), $93 million for race horses, an add-on for salmon
fisheries in California, the doubling-up of crop insurance
and "disaster relief" -- will weigh heavily on taxpayers.
The examples could go on and on; perhaps the Orlando
Sentinel editorialists put it best by calling it "a rotten
bill fit for the compost heap."
STILL, BIG-MONEY agribusiness interests seem to be holding sway
with the vast majority of Congress. Too many congressmen are too
afraid to cross those powers-that-be in order to stand for
principle.
That's why what's needed is an "Oh-Captain-My-Captain" moment.
What is needed is for one brave soul in the Republican caucus in
either Chamber, one who actually voted for this
monstrosity, to stand up at a caucus/conference meeting
(figuratively and, if he goes in for showmanship, quite literally
on a desk) and say the equivalent of "Oh Jefferson, my
Jefferson!"
He can say he was wrong. He can say this bill steals from labor
the bread it has earned and gives that tax money directly to
millionaires. He can say that he has been pressured by agribusiness
interests but is withstanding the pressure. He can say it is time
for Republicans to remember that they are supposed to be good
fiscal stewards, and time for them to hang together so they won't
all hang separately.
He should say that he will vote to uphold the president's veto,
not for the president's sake at all, but for the sake of good
governance. And then he should turn to another Member who voted for
the bill and ask that Member, too, to pledge to uphold the veto --
to stand for principle come hell or high subsidies.
And, one by one, enough Members who voted for the bill the first
time should pledge fealty to Captain Principle by sustaining the
veto.
The fact is that it is possible for Members to move to the right
and the center at the same time -- because, on fiscal issues,
conservatives see eye-to-eye with many independents. Ross Perot
built a major third-party challenge on the strength of promises of
fiscal rectitude. Jesse Ventura was elected governor of Minnesota
doing the same.
If not even one-third of one House of Congress can sustain the
president's veto of a Manhattan Millionaire's Trail to Nowhere Farm
Bill, then it will indeed be true that we must "with mournful
tread,/Walk the deck my Captain lies,/Fallen cold and dead."
topics:
John McCain, Business, Environment, Law