THIS YEAR FEDERAL CANDIDATES and campaigns will spend more than
$1 billion trying to convince Americans that if you send them to
Washington, they will reduce spending, cut waste, solve America’s
debt crisis, eliminate world hunger, and bring about world peace
(maybe, just maybe, they will be able to bring about world peace
this time).
The problem is that over the last 30 years our national debt has
ballooned from a little over $1 trillion to nearly $16 trillion—an
abject failure, if cutting spending and reducing debt were the
goals. Why?
Here’s something to think about: Most of
the candidates we ultimately send to Washington get their
big-government training as officials at the local level. Take the
111th Congress: An informal American Majority review shows that
roughly 70 percent of that session’s legislators were previously
state or local officials. Dick Lugar of Indiana (God bless the end
of his not-so-conservative political career) started out as a
school board member. Jim Inhofe of Oklahoma was once the mayor of
Tulsa. The “Dynamic Duo” from California, otherwise known as
Mesdames Senators Barbara Boxer and Dianne Feinstein, were humble
county commissioners (would that they were so again). The fact is
that most of our congressional members who’ve helped create this
vast government bureaucracy we cannot afford (yet are forced to pay
for every day) got into that pernicious habit down-ballot.
Mind you, Big Government in America didn’t start at the local
level. It is uniquely a creation of Washington. Government
expansion and sharp spending increases began with federal overreach
back in the early 20th century when those merry Progressives
spurred the explosive growth of the bureaucratic state. Then
federal officials, made less accountable by Progressive electoral
reform, fostered a permissive culture of borrowing and spending
that, decades later, is now driven from the bottom and the
top of our government. This infectious behavior has had a host of
consequences, including depressed job growth, lower incomes, and
higher taxes for most Americans—ironically mostly “blue state”
residents.
So we can rightfully chide Washington for growing, borrowing,
and spending without regard to the burden doing so places on
America’s future. But state and local governments who followed
Washington’s lead are now in far worse shape. This should be a
clarion call for conservatives to stimulate wholesale reform at the
local level. That’s where most elected officials begin their
careers, learning to spend like drunken sailors, craft deals with
unions, and tax people into oblivion.
When government grows at a faster rate than the private sector,
deficits increase. The government then raises taxes on the private
sector to increase revenue. Increased revenue ultimately feeds the
spending culture, which increases budgets and decreases private
sector revenue—resulting in greater deficits and more borrowing.
It’s a downward spiral that has hit extreme depths of fiscal
misconduct at all levels of government.
State, local, and municipal spending has contributed to our
national debt crisis and is destroying real opportunity for
countless Americans—all for the sake of maintaining an elite class
of wellpaid government workers with guaranteed employment and
Cadillac benefits.
Let’s take a look at the numbers: the federal government employs
roughly 2 million civilians, 85 percent of whom live and work
within the Washington, D.C., area. Yet here are the often
overlooked figures: A staggering 19 million Americans work for
state, county, school district, and municipal governments across
the country. Today, all these governments owe their employees a
total of more than $4.4 trillion in pension and health care
benefits alone that are presently unfunded. And as the Baby Boomers
retire, these numbers are rising at an incredible rate.
California’s annual budget deficit this year is now
more than $16 billion. That’s nearly double the projections of
Governor Jerry Brown from just a few months ago. The state’s
unfunded pension liability is now more than $500 billion and
growing. Similarly, despite raising taxes on everything that moves
(and most things that don’t), Illinois continues to buckle under
massive deficits. Many of the tax increases in Illinois were
promptly gobbled up by public employee pension liabilities. The
state today is in worse fiscal shape than it was a year ago.
San Jose, California, is a poster child for how reckless fiscal
management can lead to disaster. The city now allocates more than
75 percent of its discretionary spending to police and firefighters
alone. In the last decade, the city’s yearly pension costs have
increased by more than 330 percent, to more than half the city’s
budget. By 2014, this single municipality will spend more than $400
million on pensions alone. Needless to say, it won’t be able to
pay.
THE TROUBLING FACT is that hundreds, if not thousands, of other
municipalities across the nation are in the exact same sinking
boat. Progressives love to omit the local and state debt numbers
from our national fiscal picture to drive the ridiculous idea that
we don’t have a debt crisis, so government should be allowed to
grow unchecked.
This “shadow debt” puts us right in line with that bastion and
paragon of fiscal responsibility and economic growth, Italy. Both
the U.S. and Italy presently have a 120 percent debttoGDP ratio
when all debt is included. Greece is at 160 percent. With
skyrocketing pension liabilities, rising budget deficits, and
elected officials unwilling to force change, it won’t take us long
to blow past Rome and start nipping at the heels of Athens.
“Unseen” debt and obligations at state and local levels, with
California and Illinois leading the way, could ultimately be the
termites that destroy the economic foundation of our country. And
let’s not forget that President Obama has projected another $1
trillion (or more) shortfall for 2012 on the federal level. This
kind of reckless spending, bloated government, and massive debt
leads to higher taxes on everyone. Yes, despite what the
progressives would like you to believe, everyone will pay
for this bill, not just the so-called wealthy.
Many have speculated on the demise of the Tea Party, citing its
lack of impact on the presidential primary. Here, too, the
commentators miss the point, which is that, as a local movement,
Tea Party organizations are primed and ready to have an even
greater impact on our future. Instead of just helping change
Washington over one or two cycles, they can fix the breakdown where
it begins: at the bottom. And the results of transforming America
from the bottom up, across a broad swath of states and locales?
National, generational change—if the Tea Party will stay focused on
those levels.
The crime scene is local. Make no mistake, our communities—not
Washington, D.C.—are the real battlegrounds of our fiscal crisis,
and the trenches where America’s future will be decided. They are
also the stage on which massive national change can occur. If we
can win there, in thousands of municipalities across the country,
we can force the debate, and the nation itself, in the right
direction.