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Thursday, November 02, 2006
Larry Kudlow :: Townhall.com Columnist
Cheney's optimism, and mine
by Larry Kudlow
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In the last month's run-up to the midterm elections, stocks have been climbing while Republican polls have been falling. Does this mean the markets favor gridlock in Washington, after six years of Republican rule? It's an odd paradigm.

I put this question to Vice President Dick Cheney in Washington this week, during a special interview that aired on CNBC's "Kudlow & Co." His answer was no. He disagrees with the market. The veep strongly believes a Democratic takeover of Congress will spell trouble for both the current low-tax environment and the economy overall.

A rising stock market and sagging GOP fortunes? Cheney would prefer to think the current bull market reflects a strong economy, one that grew out of the Republican tax cuts of 2003. And it's here that he spies a danger:

"I think if Charlie Rangel ends up as chairman of the Ways and Means Committee ... that he doesn't believe there's a single one of the Bush tax cuts that ought to be extended."

A heated Charlie Rangel, in response, actually called the vice president a "sonofabitch." So the battle is joined.

Truth be told, Rangel has said more recently that he has no intention of rolling back the investor tax cuts on capital gains and dividends. But Cheney says: Not so fast.

"If a man like Charlie Rangel were to be chairman of (Ways and Means) ... sitting there with the gavel, all he has to do is not act -- just don't call up the legislation -- and there'll be a big tax increase."

So, Mr. Vice President, will you take a no-new-tax-hike pledge, including any high-tax, pay-as-you-go deals?

"Well, I will," said Cheney, "but the president is the one that obviously has got the pen, and he certainly supports that same proposition."

The vice president described the 15 percent tax rate on dividends and capital gains, the top 35 percent personal tax rate, the reduced marriage penalty and the enhanced child credit as safe with Bush in office. He believes higher taxes are not a worry.

And what about spending? Nancy Pelosi told me last week on CNBC that the Democrats, if they take the House, will push for a balanced budget and spending restraint. She also said tax increases would only be a last resort. I relayed this pledge to Cheney, who found the humor in it: "I don't think she's running on that platform in San Francisco."

But aren't the Democrats stealing the Republicans' bacon on the whole balanced-budget issue? And why haven't Republican leaders called for a balanced-budget target? So far as I know, no one in Congress or the White House has.

Cheney noted that the administration has had to meet some "extraordinary" spending requirements. Yes, they have -- among them the high price of war and security in the long wake of 9-11. But here, supply-side policy once again matters: The deficit has dropped to a low percentage of GDP, historically speaking, thanks to the economic growth and revenues thrown off from the Bush tax cuts. Said Cheney, sounding very balanced-budget minded, "We have done a lot to exercise restraint in terms of spending."

So can we expect two years of Congress and the Executive Branch trying to outdo each other on spending control? Markets won't mind at all.

And what of the outlook for even higher regulations on business? Stories of CEOs backdating stock options fill the financial pages these days. But will this fuel new restrictions on hedge funds and private equity funds?

"I'm reluctant to see additional regulation," the vice president said. "In general ... I think you can make a case that Sarbanes-Oxley went too far."

Pelosi herself said the Democrats want to relieve some of the over-regulatory pressure of Sarbanes-Oxley. More stolen bacon?

Cheney shrugs, "We'll be happy to work with them on it."

The vice president ended our talk by noting how optimistic he is with the elections only days away: He thinks the Republicans will hold the House and Senate. I'm optimistic, too, but for a different set of reasons.

Adding all this up, key Democrats say they won't raise taxes if they take the House -- and if they do try, the president will be there with his veto pen. Think Grover Cleveland, who holds the American record for presidential vetoes. The Democrats also are at least talking spending restraint, as are Cheney and his boss. And not only is the veep saying no to new regulations, there could be bipartisan agreement that Sarbanes-Oxley has gone too far.

This could be the real message of the Goldilocks market: a Reaganesque policy mix of low tax rates, limited spending and less regulation. It would continue the greatest story never told.

Or am I being too optimistic?

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About The Author

Lawrence Kudlow is host of CNBC's Kudlow & Company

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Never Told
The greatest story never told is still the greatest story never told.

The media is simply not reporting anything positive about what the Bush administration has achieved. They're doing the same thing on the subject of the war on terror. Instead of reporting dispassionate facts, they interject opinion. Even the remotest negative slant is conjured up for good news. I can't stomach it.

If the media were reporting the ressurecton of Jesus Christ, the headline would read: "Jesus of Nazareth Wastes Grave".

Hey, I've got a great idea. Ask reporters to prepare a headline for Resurrection Day. What would we really see?

Forgive Me
That was uncredibly negative, please forgive me.

I know that there would be a lot more support for the principles that are creating a strong economy if the information would simply be characterized as positive.

Unfortunately, that would create support for the Bush administration, which is anathema to liberals and the media...Ooops, I'm negative again.

Let me try again:
The economy is doing well despite the negative characterization from the media. It's almost as if the media wants to crash us...

I'm trying, I'm trying...
(Blank.)

I'll work on this and get back later...

(Sorry.)

The Deficit
Said Cheney, sounding very balanced-budget minded, "We have done a lot to exercise restraint in terms of spending."

If Cheney thinks this Congress exercised 'restraint' in spending then I've got a bridge to sell him.

Gregdn
Make it two Bridges to Nowhere located in Alaska. If Cheney is willing to trade his Halliburton stock options as a down payment, we can recoup at least some of the nearly half billion dollars that a Republican Congress and a Republican President wasted in the tundra.

Conservatives' nightmare
This Republican Congress has been guilty of aiding and abetting Bush's anti-conservative agenda for its entire six years. This includes record spending growth, record budget deficits, record numbers of special interest earmarks, record numbers of no-bid contracts to favorite cronies, record numbers of guilty pleas for congressmen and their aides, record numbers of illegal immigrants and record trade deficits. Then there are the expensive and inefficient new LBJ-type programs such as No Child Left Behind, and Medicare Drugs. Then there is the record spending and record stupidity associated with the Iraq debacle -- the bull of the Bush Administration's white elephant herd. In only six years our national debt has increased by about 50 percent.

We can't trust a Republican Congress to provide either guidance or oversight to this wacky White House. Republican Congressmen have forgotten that their first loyalty is to the country and their constituents, not to their Party. This last six years has been a nightmare for "fiscal" and "smaller government" conservatives. There is a big difference between "old-fashioned" conservatives and the White House "Neo-conservatives."

Dick Cheney
Dick Cheney is a Grrrrrrrrrrreat
American . He looks and is even
Grrrrrrrrrrrrrrreater when you compare
him with people like Charlie Rangel ,
who is lower than seaweed ,which is
on the bottom of the big pond.

Kudlow Doesn't Get it
Notice that Mr. Kudlow constrains his column to economic indices. However, most people don't think that way. Americans are much more than tedious economic statistics. In fact, economics bores most Americans. It certainly is a cure for insomnia.

After he battled with substance abuse twenty years ago, Lawrence Kudlow turned to the Roman Catholic Church for spiritual anchorage. As a Catholic myself, I think he was wise to do so. However, when I read his columns today, he seems not to have absorbed any Catholic thought whatsoever. When it comes to economics, he certainly should read up on Belloc and Chesterton.

“TAXCUT AND SPEND” REPUBLICANS...

“TAXCUT AND SPEND” REPUBLICANS have absolutely no fiscal responsibility or accountability! The last time we had a balanced budget and pay-as-you-go legislation Bill Clinton was President and the Democrats instituted these Congressional controls. So much for Bush mythology on who has conservative values. Furthermore, Bush’s supply-side economics has not conserved our nation’s economic future.

SUPPLY-SIDE ECONOMICS… has sold our kids and grandkids down the river!

George Bush’s $3 trillion dollar tax giveaway to the rich has been a disaster for average Americans. Supply-side (trickle-down) economics is a bogus theory promoted by those who benefit from it. In a mature capitalist system, supply side never rules, it’s always the demand side of the equation that governs growth and well-being. Think about the 1930s Depression, General Motors had plenty of supply, but demand evaporated.

Previous U.S. recessions have been cured with only $200 billion in tax cuts targeted to the middle class, because the consumer (the great middle class) spends that tax cut and primes the economic pump. But George Bush has raised the debt that our children and grandchildren will have to pay from almost $6 trillion to almost $9 trillion for this current recovery, which is uniquely without wage gains, and which has shrunk the middle class that makes America strong and great.

Corporations (the supply side) are now loaded with cash, but there’s no place to spend it because they don’t see any demand. So many corporations are using that cash to buy back their stock – WOW, isn’t supply side wonderful in how it fulfills America’s needs? As the rich-poor divide increases, we’re headed toward previous shining examples of trickle-down economics: South America of the recent past and feudalism in the Middle Ages (South America and feudalism also had no wage gains).

Meanwhile, on Iraq: Bush is good at spin, now it’s CUT AND RUN from “STAY THE COURSE!”

WE GET THE GOVERNMENT WE DESERVE… and, boy, we’ve really been getting it for the last few years! Truth, values, competence and results no longer matter in America.

The problem: our President is not a rational thinker – his mind accepts information from only two sources: faith and experience. For example, he learned the "the enemy will follow us here" from Vietnam and the Domino Theory: “If we don’t defeat the communists in Vietnam, then we’ll have to fight them here in America.” Now just insert “terrorists” and “Iraq” into the one lesson Bush learned from Vietnam.

Because Bush is not rational (strictly empirical and subjective), objective facts and evidence such as the latest National Intelligence Estimate (NIE) are meaningless to this anachronistic man of several millennia ago. The reality of Iraq is what he thinks it is, and so our country and our precious soldiers are in for much more of this growing catastrophe, incompetence at the top from day one and continuing for the foreseeable future, and SPIN, SPIN, SPIN.

A LITTLE HISTORY that’s still alive in the Arab world… When the Crusaders captured Jerusalem in 1099, they slaughtered all its inhabitants. When the Arab leader Saladin recaptured the city, he spared all the Christian inhabitants. So the Middle East is already primed for another war with Christian invaders; and accordingly and as the latest NIE confirms, the war in Iraq has increased the number of jihadists and terrorists and made America less safe. This is not praise for the enemy, but history and insight into why our “bring it on” cowboy President is only rekindling and fueling this centuries-old fire.

IF BUSH REMAINS UNCHALLENGED… IS IRAN NEXT? The leader of Iran comes off as a whacko, however, the Iranians and the rest of the world view George Bush in the same way, so there is a common starting point for diplomacy. Real diplomacy involves talking with your adversary one-on-one without preconditions, and there’s a lot to discuss with Iran: the CIA in the 1950s, the Shah, the 1979 hostage crisis, sponsorship of terror, Israel and justice in the Middle East. But if past is prelude, Bush’s Iranian diplomacy will be perfunctory and manipulated (as it was with Iraq), and likely God has spoken to our President again and told him to go to war with Iran after the November elections (as he did with Iraq in 2002-2003 when Bush consulted with "another Father," “a higher authority" than Bush41). This new war should go as well as the Iraq war, and further help over one billion Muslims in their decision to fight America in a mutual holy war. When the level of hatred against us finally engulfs Pakistan, then we face nuclear terror, and Biblical Armageddon becomes real and a self-fulfilling prophecy.


PricyInTheOC
Ask and thee shall receive!
The New York Times, (What a source,) just published what they THOUGHT were classified documents, (evidently without proof reading,) that contain proof of Saddam's nuke program!

____________________________________

You people from DailyKos;
This is a Conservative site, not a Day Care Center.
Please don't come over here with wet diapers on crying.
Better yet, keep your infantile language at DailyKos.

Great economy???
A high Dow does not make a better economy. A bazillion McDonald's and Wal-Mart employees do not make a good economy. hundreds of thousands with no health insurance do not make a good economy. The vast majority of Americans have lost purchasing power in terms of real (adjusted for inflation) dollars in the last 6 years. Those of us who live in the real world (we don't get millions in stock options) know the economy sucks and Dick Cheney saying it is good does not make it so.

Digging their own holes....
Mr. Bush and his cabal didn't don't need any help from the mainstream media to digging their own hole...they've done a marvelous job of it all by themselves....not only in Iraq, but in just about everything they have touched.

Now, we hear even Richarard Pearle, Bush's Mr. Neoconservative himself, is absolutely disgusted with what he calls the "devastating dysfunction within the administration of President George W. Bush".

Mr. Pearle, I couldn't have said it better myself!

Publik Skool
MAY, now you should think before you type. You hurt Dick Cheney's feelings. I see it took you 30 minutes to compose your follow up post. I eagerly await your next clearly stated rejoinder.

JohnnyC (hey, like me)!!!
Thanks for the history lesson. Indeed, we are confronting a portion of the world that regards events that took place in 1099 as equally relevant as what happened yesterday--the Mongol invasions also play into Arabs/Persians collective memory. Given that, I happen to think that given Arabs'/Persians' fatalism, tendency to harbor age-old grudges, and tribalism will doom it for a long-time as a backward and unproductive region of the world.

With Iran, they'll find some long-standing insult on which to justify their adversarial attitude, whether it's Mossadegh or World War II occupation. It's just flat out irrational. I'd rather stick with my guy who talks to God than their guy who talks to God and is hoping for return of the 12th Imam (okee-dokee), or even John Kerry, who thinks he is God.

As far as the budget deficit, I would actually counter that running a budget surplus is more damaging than a budget deficit, especially during a recession, as we were facing in 2000-2001. A treasury cannot (and should not) stockpile public funds, primarily because calling in bonds before their maturity will have long-term negative consequences for the market. During a time of historically low interest rates, say from 2001-2005, it is optimal to incur a reasonable, long-term debt. For example, I can afford the mortgage on a $450,000 house (equal to approximately my entire savings) because I locked in a low interest rate in 2004. I'm confident my future revenues will allow me to pay off my house. Back to the federal budget, increasing debt also helps to "starve the beast" and offset any potential expansion of government.

That was the aim behind the tax cuts of 2001, which spurred a turnaround in our economic fortunes that we (the productive class) still enjoy. The higher tax brackets got a greater tax cut because they pay more in taxes--the math is pretty simple. The non-productive underclass may not have benefitted to the same extent, but as they lack essential skills in the modern marketplace, they will be perpetually behind the powercurve and contribute little if anything to the future. As far as the current economy, the only significant difference between the height of the Bush boom and the height of the Clinton bubble is the notable absence of boiler room operations (although there are a lot more spammers than there were in 1998).

Looking to the election, perhaps a Democratic majority in one of the houses would encourage Bush to invoke his veto power a little more aggressively than he did. In general, I guess I'm one of the few (though no pollster's ever asked my opinion) who doesn't think the current Congess is the living embodiment of evil. Some good legislation has come out of it, namely bankruptcy reform and movement on the illegals issue. But I do agree that the earmarks need to be reined in. Congress does best when it does least.

comrade major
A budget deficit is better than a surplus????? The Bush Administration is selling our country to China to run his war. Deficit spending is no more reasonable for a country than it is for an individual. It leads to bankruptcy.
Tax cuts lead to an improved economy?? only for the very rich. I am part of your productive class and our buying power has regressed considerably since the tax cuts. My college educated daughter can't find a full time job with benefits. Health insurance costs have skyrocketed, while the CEO's pocket billions of back dated stock options. Health care costs have skyrocketed because 60% of the health care dollars goes to administrators who deny you benefits that you have been approved for.
The Republican Congress has spent more money they don't have than any other Congress in the history of the country (and that is adjusted for inflation dollars).
Bush hasn't vetoed anything because he has issued signing statements saying 'I don't have to follow this law, because I don't believe it should be a law.'
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