“TAX and tax, spend and spend, elect and elect,” Harry Hopkins,
FDR’s most trusted adviser, allegedly told Arthur Krock, veteran
columnist for the New York Times. Lest we forget, Hopkins
lived in the family quarters at the White House and, according to
files found inside the Kremlin after the fall of the Workers’
Paradise, was a Communist spy. But that aside, he also understood
politics, he understood what the people wanted from the government,
and he understood what the Roosevelt administration needed to do to
stay in power.
Hopkins later denied the quip was his, but it has become part of
the conversation and whether he said it or not, it is right on
point. Politicians live — and get reelected — by taxing and
spending other people’s money. Sadly, it is not just the Democrats
who are the culprits — the national debt nearly doubled during the
George W. Bush administration and his go-along GOP Congress, and
has doubled again in the last two and three quarters years under
you-know-who.
Steve Moore, a regular TAS contributor and member of the
Wall Street Journal editorial board, gives us a quick
tutorial this month on just what a mess the tax-spend-elect
mentality has made of the federal treasury, all under the guise of
Keynesianism. Lord Keynes may not have thought about the “elect”
part of Hopkins’ equation, and it would stretch credibility to
think that liberal academics and economists could imagine taxing
and spending serving anything but the greater good. But the only
“greater good” most politicians are interested in is their own
careers. Moore hits the nail on the head when he quotes George
Mason University economist Don Boudreaux, “When you get right down
to it, Keynesianism is just a convenient excuse for what the left
wants to do anyway: spend more government money.”
Truer words were never spoken. Spending is the politicians’
disease, and they willingly accommodate constituents’ and
lobbyists’ demands for bigger programs, special favors, earmarks
and the rest. And every politician — at least those who have been
around for more than a term or two — has his favorite expenditures
and will go to the mat to assure they survive. I’ve always thought
the best example of this was deficit hawk and conservative stalwart
Jesse Helms, who spent his 30-year career in the Senate fighting
off every conceivable sort of special interest — except the
tobacco lobby. As they used to sing about Jesse, “As long as
tobacco subsidies hold firm, he’ll get reelected every term.”
Multiply that times 535 members of Congress and you’ll get an idea
what we are up against.
So what to do? Devise a mechanism to stop unlimited spending and
call it an amendment to the Constitution requiring the government
to balance its books by matching spending to revenue — a Balanced
Budget Amendment. Constitutions in 49 of the 50 states require
governors to balance their books in one form or other (Vermont
being the odd man out). Opinion polls indicate that 75 percent of
Americans favor the idea, and although the leadership resisted it,
the recent debt ceiling debate resulted in a compromise, thanks
largely to the Republican freshmen, requiring both houses of
Congress to have a vote on such an amendment before the end of this
year.
Steve Calabresi, law professor at Northwestern and chairman of
the Federalist Society — and a new contributor to TAS — explains
why a balanced budget amendment would be wise, why one would fit
within the Constitution, what the shortcomings are, and how to get
around them.
Although the Republican House of Representatives is likely to
pass a balanced budget amendment, it is virtually certain the
Democrat-controlled Senate will vote it down. If so, all who voted
against it will have to answer on Election Day, 2012.
Michael Place| 10.12.11 @ 4:43PM
When will you publicly fire Howley Regnery? Every day you deliberate in damage control mode while enjoying all the hits to your crap site makes you look all the more complicit in his toweringly idiotic actions.
He truly is a laughing stock for whatever serves for a professional culture at your publication (I won't call it a news outlet, because informing people does not appear to be the aim at American Spectator.
Look in the mirror and ask yourself what needs to be done here and get rid of him...with fanfare.
Michael Place
Alan Brooks| 10.22.11 @ 5:23PM
Last time govt was reduced, net, was when Coolidge was president.