By Quin Hillyer on 11.5.09 @ 6:09AM
Support for smaller government is a mainstream position.
The single biggest myth in American politics is that advocacy of
limited government is a fringe position. The way to attract
"moderates" and "independents," we are told, is for conservatives
to adopt some sort of stratagem that involves using government
actively but wisely and efficiently, for the right ends, in order
to attract the target audience du jour:
suburbanites, exurbanites, Bobos, soccer moms, Hispanics,
metrosexuals, or any number of other strata of supposedly
poll-tested exotica.
Balderdash.
As Tuesday's elections showed, support for limited government
remains a mainstream position. Deficit-spending makes majorities
angry. Leviathan's tentacles, its rules and regulations,
infuriate most Americans. Big bureaucracies are as popular as
swine flu. And far more people than not still just want to be
left alone.
Nearly a year ago I
traced the electoral success of Republicans when they do
restrain spending versus those times when they don't. Hint: When
they save, they win; when they spend, they lose.
The swing voters in most elections aren't David Brooks's mythical
Bobos in paradise; the swing voters are the Ross Perot/Jesse
Ventura "raging moderates" who think that if they must pay their
bills, then the government darn well ought to pay its bills as
well. But not by raising their taxes, because that makes it
harder for them to pay their own bills. These voters work hard;
they already give to government far more, financially, than they
will ever get in return from it in either cash or services (with
the exception that they know they can never repay the
unquantifiable sacrifices or risks taken by our uniformed
personnel); and they resent like hell when some pencil pusher
tries to tell them what to do. They tend to be disaffected voters
who wish poxes on both major political houses: Sometimes they
stay away from the polls in large numbers, but at other times
they turn out en masse, sometimes in favor of a
candidate who galvanizes them but often just to "send a message"
against incumbents, against the status quo, or against Washington
in general. Even when they are "aginners," though, they also are
motivated more by love than hate: love for their country, their
freedom, or their families. They are angry not as much because of
what they want to tear down, as because they feel a threat to or
diminishment of what they most fiercely want to protect.
And these voters insist on balanced budgets. They hate government
bailouts and takeovers. They despise government mandates. And
they really, really, really hate government pork.
While it would be a mistake to type-cast these voters too
narrowly, it is fair to say that one reasonably representative
example is Joe the Plumber Wurzelbacher. John McCain was flailing
around like a drowning drunk until he grabbed onto Wurzelbacher
as if Joe the Plumber were a life-preserver. And Joe struck a
chord, clearly stopping McCain's free-fall last year and starting
a belated comeback that made the election a six-point affair
rather than a 12-point loss. Joe was, by any measure, a fiscal
conservative -- and he also was, attitudinally, a Perotista
through and through.
Bob McDonnell in Virginia ran on a platform of limited government
without tax hikes. He won in an unprecedented landslide. Chris
Christie in New Jersey lost an immense lead until, in the final
ten days, he finally started emphasizing conservative economic
positions. Just as had happened when Christine Todd Whitman
embraced that low-tax emphasis 16 years ago, also in the very
closing stages of what had been a floundering campaign, Chris
Christie's greater focus on limiting government came just in time
to pull out a victory.
In the New York congressional special election, Doug Hoffman's
ability to vault past Dede Scozzafava was fueled largely by his
insistence on fiscal propriety. Had Scozzafava not supported the
Obama stimulus package, she may well have found a way to win the
race. As it was, Hoffman earned 46 percent of the vote despite
being less-than-familiar with some important local issues,
despite being buried on an unfamiliar ballot line, despite
lacking polish or experience as a candidate, despite having
Scozzafava take 6 percent of the vote on the GOP line, despite
not technically living in the district, and even though
Scozzafava endorsed his Democratic opponent. As it was, the
Democrat, Bill Owens, publicly rejected the "public option" on
health care and worked hard to present himself as a proponent of
a sound fisc.
Much more could be said about that race, and about the media's
misrepresentation of its dynamics and of the entire narrative of
the various races nationwide. Much more will be written on those
subjects in this very space. For now, though, Beltway Republicans
should learn the lesson, once and for all, that if they do not
fight to limit government, there is no other good reason for them
even to exist as a party. And voters will recognize that the GOP
solons have no reason to exist, and treat them accordingly.
topics:
Republican Party, Government Spending, Joe the Plumber