The budget drama that has filled headlines for weeks is an
important story, yet its outcome is still uncertain. Much is at
stake: Is the U.S. to be kept on a permanently higher government
spending path, which is what President Obama, most of the news
media, and all the Democrats want? Or can spending be restored to
pre-2008 levels?
I have been writing budget articles for years and in that time I
have learned a simple lesson, as the following two anecdotes may
show. My first such article, for Harper’s in 1979, included an interview with
Chris Matthews. A longtime aide to Speaker Tip O’Neill, Matthews,
now a TV star, was an officer with the U.S. Capitol Police when he
came to Washington. When I saw him he was toiling away in a
Washington bureaucracy downtown — maybe the OMB.
Chris was full of jokes, but he gave me this heads-up. “Budget?”
he said in mock alarm. “No one reads articles about the budget!”
Government reorganization was the number-one turnoff for readers,
he said, but “budget” came in a close second. After I had written a
few more (unread) budget articles, I realized how right he was.
A second anecdote involves Newt Gingrich. When he was Speaker of
the House, the U.S. government was briefly shut down. You probably
don’t recall the details. In the fall of 1995 the Congress sent a
budget to the White House without including the extra spending on
Medicare, education, environment, and other goodies that President
Clinton wanted. So he vetoed the bill and the government was shut
down. Yet Gingrich was blamed.
It was even reported that only “essential government workers”
would stay on the job after the shutdown. That should have told us
that there are lots of inessential government workers out there,
but as Matthews could have told us, no one was reading beneath the
headlines. And in that visible spot, Gingrich was portrayed as the
villain. It worked.
Months later I met Gingrich himself coming out of the American
Enterprise Institute. He told me that what he hadn’t taken into
account was that liberals control the news media. He should have
known that, of course, but even so it seems reasonable to have
assumed that the man who vetoed the
budget should have taken the blame. But he didn’t. Gingrich
did. A minor episode in which it seemed that Gingrich had been
driven by personal pique was inflated into an act of retaliation
against Clinton, and “polls showed” that a majority accepted that
the shutdown was Gingrich’s fault.
How does today’s situation compare? We were told that the sky
would fall if the debt ceiling was not raised by August 2. Obama,
the Democrats and the New York
Times axis tried mightily to use this deadline to push
the GOP into raising taxes one more time. They apparently failed to
achieve their “grand bargain.” Spending cuts will probably turn out
to be spending increases that are smaller than planned. But
Republicans in the House deserve credit for holding firm against
tax increases (gratitude to Grover Norquist).
There is still a danger as I write. The Tea Party–supported
House is so confident that their constituents want no increase in
the debt ceiling that they may be willing to bring down the fiscal
house. If so, a full court media press would blame the GOP, and
Obama’s “adult in the room” message might carry the day. In
response, Sen. Mitch McConnell of Kentucky has proposed giving the
president the power to raise the debt ceiling with no new taxes,
but continuing to hold Obama’s feet to the deficit fire.
I don’t know how this will play out. But the 1990s should be a
warning. Incomprehension is widespread, the Matthews dictum still
reigns, and budget stories are unread. The phrase “deficit
reduction” still deceives people into thinking that the budget is
being reduced, when it is being increased. These days news-media
influence on public policy is waning, but right now we are in a
moment when they still carry weight. Headline writers can decide
who deserves the blame.
Compare it to the coverage of abortion. It is a perilous issue
for liberals because everyone understands what abortion involves.
On the other hand a “grand bargain to avert a crisis by reducing
the deficit on a bipartisan basis” is perilous for conservatives
because only insiders understand it. Usually they are up to no
good.
House Speaker Boehner is more deft than Gingrich; the
unemployment rate is higher and the potential financial crisis is
far greater (nonexistent in Clinton’s day). So if Obama were to
veto a raised debt ceiling today because it had no new revenues he
surely would be the loser. Still, there is peril. Obama’s problem
(and ours) is that he is adamantly pursuing leftist policies that,
over and over again, have been shown not to work. He is unlikely to
change and if he gets past the 2012 election he certainly
won’t.
There is a related and even bigger international story. Starting
with Greece, where sovereign default is already under way, a big
fiscal crisis is brewing in parts of Europe. It is likely to boil
down to this: how much longer will German taxpayers continue
propping up other Eurozone countries, such as Portugal, Italy, and
Spain?
MEANWHILE IT’S time for us to ask this question: How come we
expect the State to take care of so
many of our concerns? Educating our children. Guarding our
health. Paying doctors’ bills. Paying out pensions. Subsidizing
housing. Funding scientific research. Handing out taxpayers’ money
to those without jobs. Agitating about the environment and shutting
down expensive, job—creating projects if so much as a minnow is
endangered.
We even dole out taxpayers’ money to foreign officials so that
they can send some of it on to their own people (keeping some,
maybe a lot, for themselves). These were not considered to be the
responsibility of the state until quite recently. And all this is
in addition to the roles traditionally considered appropriate:
defense, police, and the maintenance of law and justice.
Televised democracy and a media still dominated by people who
are hostile to any reduction of these burdens on taxpayers make
change nearly impossible. A fiscal collapse may be the only way.
Unproductive people, whether through their own fault or not, can
receive tens of thousands of dollars from the state and cast one
vote each. Working people compelled to hand over thousands of
dollars to the state also have one vote each. This setup, in which
democracy is designed to maximize income redistribution, has taken
decades to play itself out. It now looks inherently unstable.
Perhaps it deserves to collapse.