Posted on 02/09/2008 8:35:27 AM PST by rob777
Before my more conservative friends start leaping from buildings over Senator John McCains presidential primary victories, let me try to coax them back in from the ledge. Despite his myriad apostasies (e.g. McCain-Feingolds free-speech limits, anti-ANWR-oil-drilling votes, a mixed tax-cut record, creeping Kyotoism, and cold feet on waterboarding), the Arizona Republican could do for fiscal responsibility what Ronald Reagan did for tax relief.
Thanks to the Gipper, tax reduction is as central to the Republican faith as the Resurrection is to Christianity. True, McCain heretically opposed President Bushs 2001 and 2003 tax cuts. However, he now appears penitent and observant. He proposes to make Bushs tax cuts permanent and slice corporate taxes from 35 to 25 percent, among other reforms.
But in terms of limited-government, todays GOP recalls the Roman Catholic Churchs excesses before the Reformation of 1517. For nearly a decade, Republicans have indulged in a spending bacchanal that shredded their moral authority and shocked Republican true believers. Like a latter-day Martin Luther, a President McCain may nail his own 95 Theses to the U.S. Capitols front door and shame Congress, before it spends again.
Cato Institute researcher Michael Tanner cites White House figures to illustrate how Washingtons spending has waned and waxed since 1980. Under President Reagan, overall federal outlays decreased from 22.2 percent of Gross Domestic Product, to 21.2. On President G.H.W. Bushs watch, spending increased to 21.4 percent. During the Clinton years, expenditures fell to 18.5. And during President G.W. Bushs tenure, spending boomeranged to 20.7 percent of GDP.
Reagan had a Democratic House to contend with, so anything he achieved was to the good, Tanner explains. The elder president Bush was sort of a non-event. Clinton and a Republican Congress represented the most fiscally conservative period. And this President Bush and a Republican Congress were a disaster.
McCain largely has refused to be led into temptation. He supported 2001s $143.4 billion No Child Left Behind Act, but fought 2002s $180 billion farm bailout, 2003s $558 billion Medicare drug entitlement, and 2005s $286.4 billion highway bill, which contained 6,371 earmarks worth $24 billion.
Those were the four biggest budget-busting bills of the Bush presidency, notes Heritage Foundation fiscal analyst Brian Riedl. And McCain voted against three of them.
Wouldnt it be refreshing for a President McCain, at last, to give Americas farmers the straight talk they so richly deserve?
My friends, McCain might declare before some Mid-Western barn, when it rains, you cry for flood relief, and it cascades in. When the skies are cloudless, you scream for drought assistance, and it arrives. When your prices are low, you demand help, and the checks soon follow. Since last January, corn prices have climbed 123 percent. Soy beans are up 176 percent, and spring wheat has risen 274 percent. And yet Washington stands ready to grant your howls for $286 billion in yet another farm-welfare bonanza. Enough already. Please stop farming the government and go till your fields. The party is over. The trough is empty. Goodbye.
Hayekian fantasy? Hardly.
McCain courageously opposed the wasteful, environmentally destructive federal ethanol program -- while battling his Republican rivals in Iowa.
I will open every market in the world to Iowas agricultural products. Im the biggest free marketer and free trader that you will ever see, McCain said at the December 12 Des Moines Register debate. And I will also eliminate subsidies on ethanol and other agricultural products. They are an impediment to competition. Theyre an impediment to free markets. And I believe that subsidies are a mistake.
McCain has stayed tightfisted on the hustings. According to a January 29 National Taxpayers Union study of presidential candidates promises, McCain wants $6.9 billion in new spending. Former Massachusetts governor Willard Mitt Romney favors $19.5 billion in fresh outlays. Free-market Romneys automated phone calls in Florida actually slammed McCain because he voted against the AARP-backed Medicare prescription-drug program. Former Arkansas governor Mike Huckabee advocates $54.2 billion in government-funded initiatives. Romneys ideological gymnastics and Huckabees folksy profligacy should worry taxpayers.
You would not have to look hard for reasons to dislike McCain, says Catos Michael Tanner. But if spending is what you care about, he is far more conservative than either Romney or Huckabee.
Equating McCain with the greatest President of the 20th century is obscene.
Where is the "fiscal discipline" in forcing us to buy oil from depots that hate us?
Regards
He may or may not be, but people hear aren’t going to listen.
McCain has assemble an awesome economic team, but you are going to get the “Juan Hernandez” photo posted in about 10 seconds.
If his Campaign management is any indicator, he’s a regular Imelda Marcos of fiscal responsibility.
..and rightfully so, since McCain is a champion for the Mexican economy.
But we have to rally behind Mr. “50 cent gas-tax, open borders, taxpayer funded embryonic cell research, carbon taxer”, don’t you know?
I have my problems with McCain, but his record on spending is not one of them.
Hes done allot better per dollar than Romney...
I will do so again this time with the least amount of joy I have ever had but I will do it.
I'm sorry so many people feel that it is somehow acceptable to give the white house to the dems when they already have congress. It will give them the scotus and we will wait 30 years to recover from that.
Id rather have a war time president limited by a rudimentary understanding of economics (McCain) than one limited by a less that rudimentary understanding of the Military (Romney)
He’ll be the best president Mexamericanada ever has.
And rightly so. What good is an economic package if we’ve handed over the country to Mexico?
To make you feel even worse, you are going to vote to give a man who gutted the 1st amendment the power to appoint SCOTUS judges.
Well stated, were the GOP in control of congress with no chance of losing it I *might* be tempted to sit this one out but there is no way I will have Nancy Pelosi and Harry Reid being the only thing between us and the Clinton agenda..
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