By George Neumayr on 2.4.09 @ 6:08AM
Barack the plumber flushes out Daschle.
During the presidential campaign Barack Obama defended America's
unwieldy and rapacious tax system, informing Joe the Plumber that
the purpose of the IRS is to "spread the wealth around." Joe
Biden chipped in that paying higher taxes is "patriotic."
Tom Daschle has now been thrown under the party's fleet of
limousines (though whether his old car and driver participated in
running him over isn't clear to me). Nonetheless, the richly
ironic first image left by Obama's first days is that of an elite
cabal of bumbling tax evaders, awarding themselves an upper-class
tax cut through cluelessness. Daschle's class carfare has undone
him.
A president ostensibly committed to a redistributionist system of
complex and onerous taxes has managed to saddle himself with a
Treasury secretary who is now principally known for avoiding
them. Unwittingly and trivially, true, but still it is an
unexpungeable PR stain for Obama's chief tax collector.
Of all the people to withdraw, one would have thought Geithner
might have raised his hand. Instead, Nancy Killefer had to drop
out haplessly, withdrawing her nomination as performance czar for
not paying the District of Columbia some specious unemployment
household-help tax (a foot-fault probably on the order of running
behind in paying D.C.'s tyrannical parking tickets).
Looking back at the intense discussions about taxes during the
campaign, it is notable that unpaid taxes has turned out to be
the easiest place to grab on the ethically untucked shirt of the
Obama administration. Who is next? Where will it end? What worthy
public servant hasn't failed from time to time to pay $130,000 in
taxes?
Obama's gaudy promises of the let's-change-"the way Washington
works" variety puts one in mind of Bill Clinton's amusingly
brazen whopper that he endeavored to preside over the "most
ethical administration ever," a claim Clinton made fresh from the
most unethical campaign ever. Perhaps Obama's is shaping up to be
the second most ethical administration ever.
Indeed, as Daschle headed back to K Street by foot, Obama's White
House bragged about its staggeringly high ethical bar, implying
that it is higher, if conceivable, than the Clinton
administration's and surely Bush's. One would think Obama, who in
the end is just a standard-issue liberal pol, no worse than
anyone but not appreciably better either, would downplay
expectations not just on the economy but on these matters too.
Who is he kidding?
"Ethical" in any case is a weasel word that denotes not morality
but the careful, consultant-assisted observation of technical
rules, tax, political, and otherwise -- exactly what his would-be
administration hasn't been doing. A while back Nancy Pelosi and
Harry Reid (which was Obama's proudest legislative
accomplishment) passed a reform bill with that as the dominant
definition of ethics.
To be ethical meant one hired a competent accountant, a savvy
consultant, etc., and one filled out forms properly, observed
corrupt lobbying rules precisely, and paid taxes and fees
promptly and completely. How disappointing, then, to see Daschle,
an early architect of this New Jerusalem, commit such an
avoidable oversight: an accountant, an accountant, his cabinet
post for an accountant.
By its own silly definitions, the Obama administration appears
unethical and unpatriotic (in the Biden sense), a collection of
trivial rule-breakers and minor tax cheats. Still, one would
think that a brave and idealistic liberal president might shrug
off these matters and stand by the Daschles, lest the nation be
deprived of their abundant talents.
In his mind he needed Geithner, but Daschle apparently was
expendable -- too much of an embarrassment after Obama allowed
himself a week of pot shots at jet-setting fat cats. Also, he
needs to resume his campaign of class warfare, and if its first
victims are would-be members of his own cabinet, so be it.