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Ramblings
Allan C. Brownfeld
Allan C. Brownfeld covers Washington, D.C. Government Spending Is Out of Control and Few
in Washington Seem to Notice or Care
Ten years ago Newt Gingrich declared that, “We Republicans will
make government smaller and smarter.” It has not turned out that way.
The 2005 budget proposed by President Bush is nearly $1 trillion larger
than when the Republican revolution was launched.
Not only is the budget growing each year, whichever party is in
power, but it is not being paid for. The Congressional Budget Office
released its new deficit projections late in January. Its forecast is
that the deficit will total nearly $2.4 trillion over the next decade,
almost $1 trillion more than the estimate only five months earlier. The
real prognosis is actually much worse because creative government
accounting ignores some likely costs. It is more realistic to anticipate
that the federal government will spend about $5 trillion more over the
next ten years than it takes in.
Stephen Moore, president of the Club for Growth and senior fellow
in economics at the Cato Institute, notes that: . . . in recent decades, neither political party has been a particularly
good steward of taxpayer resources. Government ingests about 4 times to
5 times more of America’s national output today than in 1990. The
government’s share of everything we produce and earn has about doubled
since the end World War II. . . . President Bush has allowed the budget
to grow by 8 percent per year after
inflation in his first three budgets. What’s worse, many in Washington
want government to grow a lot more in a hurry. Most of the Democrats
running for president, and even some Republicans in Congress yearn for
the day when government entirely takes over the health-care industry.
In his proposed 2005 budget, Moore reports that President Bush Seeks
to keep marriages intact, to prevent overeating, to encourage teenagers
not to have sex, and to help give Americans the willpower to stop
smoking. Should it bother us that both parties now have bought into the
belief government now has a federal program, bureau, agency or grant
contract to deal with every conceivable need: an indoor rain forest in
Iowa, an arts festival in Alaska, and swimming pools in New York—and,
what’s next, relief from the acne on my teenager’s right cheek. . .
. Our out-of-control budget . . . erodes personal freedom. When
government grows, as Thomas Jefferson once famously put it, “liberty
yields.” Dollar by trillions of dollars, we are voluntarily giving up
our liberties for a government that promises us in return a blanket of
protection from cradle to coffin. Republicans are steering us in the
direction of the “workers paradise” of a European socialist welfare
state, and the reply from the Democrats is faster, faster. In the chapter of the Bush budget
called “Stewardship,” it is shown the federal spending will rise
from about 20 percent of the gross domestic product this year to 53
percent in 2080. Much of this comes from interest on the debt, which
rises by 20 percent of GDP. Bruce Bartlett, senior fellow with the
National Center for Policy Analysis, argues that, The
addition of an expensive new unfunded benefit to Medicare for
prescription drugs means future spending will be much, much greater than
projected. When people are given something that is heavily subsidized,
they use much more of it. Consequently, we can expect drug spending by
the elderly to rise very rapidly, especially since drug prices are also
likely to rise as demand outstrips supply. The budget itself admits
these trends are “unsustainable.”
When the administration pushed its Medicare bill through
Congress, it knew that Congress’ budget resolution provided only $400
billion over ten years to pay for the drug benefit. Anything higher
would have delayed—or prevented—passage. Thus, the administration
did not tell Congress that its own estimate showed the plan would cost
at least $134 billion more. That fact became known after the bill was
passed.
Peter Peterson, the former Nixon commerce secretary and a
long-time advocate of fiscal responsibility, writes in his forthcoming
book Running On Empty: In
the 1980 election, Ronald Reagan galvanized the American electorate with
that riff: “I want to ask every American: Are you better off now than
you were four years ago?” Perhaps some future-oriented presidential
candidate should rephrase this line as follows: “I want to ask every
American, young people especially: Is your future better off now than it
was four years ago—now that you are saddled with this large new
liabilities and the higher taxes that must eventually accompany them?”
Peterson indicts Republicans and Democrats as co-conspirators in
our fiscal crisis. Looking to the future, he writes: Quite
simply, those bell-bottomed young boomers of the late 1960s have fully
matured. The oldest of them, born in 1946, are only six years away from
the median age of retirement on Social Security (63). As a result, our
large pension and health care benefit programs will soon experience
rapidly accelerating benefit outlays. . . . Thus, at a time when the
federal government should be building up surpluses to prepare for the
aging of the baby boom generation, it is engaged in another reckless
experiment with large and permanent tax cuts. America cannot grow its
way out of the kinds of long-term deficits we now face. . . . The odds
are growing that today’s ballooning trade and fiscal deficits, the
so-called twin deficits, will someday trigger an explosion that causes
the economy to sink—not rise.
Some in the administration tell us that deficits no longer
matter. “During the Vietnam War,” notes Peterson, .
. . conservatives relentlessly pilloried Lyndon Johnson for his fiscal
irresponsibility. But he only wanted guns and butter. Today, so-called
conservatives are out pandering L. B. J. They must have it all: guns,
butter and tax cuts.
Finally, some conservatives are speaking up—and are applying
the same principles to the current administration that they have
traditionally applied to those of the other party.
Former Rep. John Kasich (R-Ohio), former chairman of the House
Budget Committee, recalls that Back
in 2001, when I left Congress . . . the budget was balanced. . . . $453
billion of debt had been paid down, and there were future surpluses
amounting to $5.6 trillion that could be used to save and reform Social
Security. These accomplishments were possible because a committed team
of public servants made huge political sacrifices for the benefit of
their children. It took a government shutdown (show-down) to make it
clear to President Bill Clinton that I and others in Congress would stop
at nothing less than fiscal responsibility. . . . We balanced the first
budget since man walked on the moon because we were able to beat back
the big-government, business-as-usual politicians.
That achievement did not last very long. States Kasich: Unfortunately,
our success was short-lived. . . . Since 2001 government spending has
grown almost 20 per cent, from $1.96 trillion then to the more than $2.3
trillion contained in . . . the Bush budget. . . . Some blame President
Bush’s tax cuts, some blame the war on terrorism, but it all comes
down to one simple reason: a lack of political will to curtail the rise
and growth of government spending. An example of this is the bloated
budget bill. It provides money for a birthday party for Hawaii and the
study of fruit flies in France. Who is to blame? Everyone who has
participated in the process, which means both Republicans and Democrats.
To his former Republican colleagues, Kasich declares: Please
don’t argue that deficit spending and big government don’t matter.
They are a claim on future income either through higher taxes, or
inflation and higher interest rates.
To his Democratic friends, Kasich says: Deficits
are not caused by taxes being too low, but by spending being too high.
Your solution of raising taxes will lead only to slower economic growth
and even more spending in the future.
Discussing President Bush’s State of the Union message, Brian
M. Riedl, a budget analyst at the Heritage Foundation, pointed out that The
president used the State of the Union to defend past spending increases,
and he made eight specific calls for new spending increases. But he made
zero calls for spending cuts. He merely said focus on priorities, cut
wasteful spending and be wise with the people’s money. That’s not
specific enough.
An indication of growing dismay with the administration on the
part of conservatives came at the annual Conservative Political Action
Conference (CPAC) held in Washington January. Rep. Mike Spence
(R-Indiana) addressed the group: .
. . the ship of conservative governance has gone off course. . . . Many
who call themselves conservatives see government increasingly as the
solution to every social ill and—let us be clear on this point—this
is a historic departure from the limited-government traditions of our
party and millions of its first ardent supporters. . . . A decade ago
when I first ran for Congress, Republicans dreamed of eliminating the
federal Department of Education and returning control of our schools to
parents, communities and states. Ten years later we get the “No Child
Left Behind Act.”. . . Our Reaganite beliefs that education was a
local function were labeled “far right” by Republicans and the
president signed the bill into law with Ted Kennedy at his side.
The notion that “party loyalty” demands that Republicans
support whatever a Republican president may do is, fortunately, in
retreat. Rep. Spence declared that to ask the hard questions he and
others have been asking “is not a sign of disloyalty, but of true
loyalty to principle.”
Conservative columnist Cal Thomas asked: Are
they listening at the White House? Perhaps they think they can dismiss
conservatives with the familiar, “Where else can conservatives go?”
They can “go” into inaction or they can stay home and not vote. It
has happened before. Ask President Bush No. 41, who raised taxes after
promising he wouldn’t. He later said it was a major mistake, but too
late to win him reelection. In a close election people of principle can
mean the difference between victory and defeat.
For most Democrats and Republicans in Washington, however, their
basic principle seems to be the one F. D. R.’s aide Harry Hopkins
proclaimed: “Tax and tax, spend and spend, elect and elect,”
although Republicans have altered the formula with tax cuts and deficits
as the centerpiece of their handiwork. Needed: An
Immigration Policy for the 21th Century
At the present time, the U.S. has no real immigration policy.
There are, of course, laws on the books. But they are violated daily as
men and women cross the border in increasing numbers. There are now
between 8 and 14 million illegal aliens residing in the U.S.
In response to this widespread and casual violation of the law,
President Bush, in January, proposed an ambitious plan that would allow
undocumented workers to remain in the U.S. and legally hold jobs. This
has led to an increasingly heated debate over the merits of rewarding
illegal behavior—as well as over the changing nature of our demography
as a result of what some have called “open borders.”
The number of illegal aliens caught crossing into the U.S.
increased dramatically just days after President Bush proposed his
amnesty program, according to the union that represents the Border
Patrol’s 9,000 field agents. The National Border Patrol Council said
in February that apprehension totals increased threefold in the San
Diego area alone, adding that the vast majority of aliens detained along
the border told arresting agents that they had come to the U.S. seeking
amnesty.
A report issued in December by the Federation for Immigration
Reform (FAIR) details how net immigration to the U.S. rose dramatically
by 1.4 million in each of the past two years, about a half-million being
illegal aliens. If these trends continue, the first decade of the 21st
century will mark the most massive wave of immigration in American
history. By 2010, a total of 45 million immigrants, both legal and
illegal, will reside in the U.S., constituting about 14 percent of the
projected population.
For many years, both Democrats and Republicans have decided not
to enforce our immigration laws. Republicans are often motivated by the
pressure of business, which seeks cheap labor. Democrats succumb to
pressure from various ethnic groups which seek to expand their numbers
and influence through immigration.
Mark Krikorian, executive director of the Center of Immigration
Studies, notes that, The
starting point of immigration policy must be adequate capacity, and a
willingness actually to enforce the law, whatever the content of the law
happens to be. Lack of enforcement has been the central problem of
immigration policy. Congress can design the most elegant legal and
administrative framework imaginable, but it won’t matter if the
immigration authorities are not permitted to use it to enforce the law.
. . . The chief reason for the lack of enforcement of our immigration
law is not incompetence or malfeasance on the part of the immigration
bureaucracy, though there is surely plenty of that to go around. The
real problem is the firm determination of Congress and successive
administrations that the law not be enforced. For instance, when
the INS conducted raids during Georgia’s Vidalia onion harvest in
1998, thousands of illegal aliens—knowingly hired by
farmers—abandoned the fields to avoid arrest. By the end of the week,
both of the state’s senators and three congressmen had sent an
outraged letter to Washington complaining that the INS “. . . does not
understand the needs of America’s farmers” and that was the end of
that.
Despite a weak American economy, rising unemployment, and the
loss of jobs since 2000, immigration has significantly outpaced the
1990s. Dan Stein, executive director of FAIR, argues that .
. . the advocates of mass immigration who justified the record-breaking
immigration levels of the 1990s on labor-market demands during the
high-tech, bubble-driven economy of that era . . . were
totally wrong. When the bubble burst, he declares, the people just keep
coming: The
past two years prove conclusively that immigration today is wholly
unrelated to economic needs and conditions in this country.
Aside from the fact that our virtually open borders make it
possible for terrorists, narcotics traffickers and others to easily
enter the country, there are other concerns being expressed about our
current massive and uncontrolled immigration.
In a report issued by the Hoover Institution, “Making and
Remaking America: Immigration into the United States,” Philip Martin
and Peter Duignan write that, Immigration
has numerous unintended social consequences. The old-style immigrant was
usually a European. The new-style immigrant mostly comes from Asia,
Latin America, and the Caribbean, countries whose political and social
traditions greatly differ from those of the United States. Moreover, as
in previous waves of immigration, the new immigrants have higher
birthrates than the natives, which increases the effects of immigration
on population growth. The old immigrants, however diverse, all derived
from the Judeo-Christian tradition, whereas new immigrants include
Muslims, Confucians, Buddhists, and adherents of Shinto. Such cultural
multiplicity . . . may split the U.S. linguistically and spiritually in
the future.
Today’s immigrants come at a time when the older “melting
pot” philosophy is under increasing attack. In many instances,
immigrants promote bilingual education programs, maintain citizenship in
their native countries, and resist assimilation. Political scientist
Peter Skerry notes that Mexican-Americans, for example, .
. . are being seduced by the new American political systems into
adopting the not entirely appropriate, divisive, and counterproductive
stance of a racial minority group. Indeed,
the Census Bureau forecasts that, by 2050, Caucasians will barely form a
majority of the population and Hispanics will be the largest minority in
the country, exceeding black Americans.
How can we truly make the newer, legal immigrants into
Americans—as we assimilated past waves of immigrants? Martin and
Duigman express the view that, If
it is the United States’ political aim to assimilate immigrants into a
single nation, annual immigration must be kept in bounds. We suggest not
more than two per thousand of population during any one year. This would
reduce the current level of immigration to about 500,000 annually, not
including refugees and skilled immigrants—still a generous quota. For
political reasons, the U.S. should also ensure a diversity of
immigrants, not allowing too many (perhaps not more than 10 percent of
the total) from any one country in every single year.
Beyond this, write Martin and Duignan, Amnesties
for illegal immigrants need to be halted to make clear that this is not
a viable route to U.S. citizenship. Affirmative action programs should
be terminated. Census categories such as “Hispanic” and “Asian”
should be replaced by national origin classifications. English only
should be required in the law, government, schools, and the political
system. No long-term bilingual education programs should be mandated. A
transition year or two can be provided for those who do not speak
English; then English only must be required in all academic courses, but
training in foreign languages as a second language should also be
encouraged. . . . For the foreseeable future, America seems likely to
remain the world’s major destination for immigrants. Our history and
traditions suggest that, within a few decades, most of today’s
immigrants will be an integral part of a revised American community. But
past success does not guarantee that history will repeat itself. There
are concerns about the size and nature of today’s immigration,
especially about arrivals through the side and backdoors. As the nation
searches for an immigration policy for the 21st century, America—and
the immigrants who are on the way—are embarked on a journey to an
uncertain destination.
Neither Republicans or Democrats, however, appear ready to
confront this serious question, or even to discuss it seriously.
President Bush’s “amnesty” program is not a policy. The National
Border Patrol council, which represents all of the Border Patrol’s
non-supervisory agents, has told its members to challenge the
President’s program as a “slap in the face to anyone who has ever
tried to enforce the immigration laws of the United States.”
Tony Blankley, editorial page editor of The Washington Times,
writes that What
might not have been predicted is the Republican Party’s
passivity—now complicity—in abandoning a defense of our borders
against illegal entry. As the law and order, strong on defense,
traditional values party, one would have expected the Republican Party
to have been the champion of secure borders. But political, cultural and
interest group factors have deflected the GOP from its natural position.
Because, due to changing demographics, the GOP must increase its share
of the Hispanic vote to at least 40 percent over the next generation,
the GOP’s leadership is afraid to risk antagonizing such votes by a
secure borders policy. . . . Neither party is currently disposed to
fight hard for a maximum effort to secure our borders from illegal
entry. . . . Such a condition is unhealthy for both the country in
general and specifically our democratic political process.
Immigrants, of course, have always been a key element in our
dynamic society. That our society attracts men and women from around the
world who have the ambition to improve their lives and live in freedom
is a great compliment. Still, under international as well as domestic
law, the U.S., as a sovereign state, has the right and responsibility to
control who enters and settles in the country. Every sovereign state
claims the right to control its own borders—including Mexico, which
often treats illegal migrants from Central America harshly.
George Vernez, in a 1996 report of the Rand Corporation,
“National Security Migrating: How Strong the Link?” argues that
there are two immigration-related threats to national security. One is
potential loss of credibility in the federal government’s ability to
protect its citizens from such unwanted elements as illegal immigrants,
drug traffickers and terrorists. Inaction in reestablishing and
maintaining this credibility could become a serious threat to internal
stability and confidence in government.
Too often, the debate over immigration runs to extremes. On one
side, there are those who seek to dramatically reduce or stop
immigration. On the other side are those who urge “open borders.”
The real answer lies between these two. But the law must be enforced,
whatever it is. Today’s immigration law—and the amnesty which has
been proposed for those who have violated it—is no policy at all. It
will be too bad if the coming presidential campaign does not confront
and address this issue. Ω “To
hell with the news! I’m no longer interested in news. I’m interested
in causes. We don’t print the truth. We don’t pretend to print the
truth. We print what people tell us. It’s up to the public to decide
what’s true.” —Ben Bradlee, when Editor of the Washington Post,
quoted from the book, Trashing the Planet, by Dr. Dixy Lee Ray,
p. 76 |
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