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Monday, March 12, 2007
Larry Kudlow :: Townhall.com Columnist
Any Hedgehogs Running for President?
by Larry Kudlow
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Another impressive jobs report was released by the U.S. Department of Labor last Friday, but you didn’t hear anything about it from the big-three Republican candidates for president. They claim to support President Bush’s supply-side tax cuts, and say they will fight repeal should they be elected to the Oval Office. Yet neither Sen. McCain, nor former-Gov. Romney, nor former-Mayor Giuliani talks about the continued economic benefits of the sweeping tax cuts of 2003.

This is puzzling. It's easy to understand why the leading Democratic candidates are silent on the matter. Sen. Clinton., Sen. Obama, and former-Sen Edwards intend to overturn President Bush’s supply-side program, and would do so with the usual liberal mantra of taxing the rich. But Republican silence is baffling in the real-world laboratory where evidence shows the tax cuts have worked. In particular, taxing capital less has unlocked new investment and unleashed record liquidity to fund business and the stock market, even in the face of money-tightening actions by the Federal Reserve.

Just look at the evidence. Wall Street economist Michael Darda points out that real wages from increased job creation have climbed at twice the speed during this business cycle than in the first 66 months of the previous cycle. Boosted by service-sector job creation, nonfarm payrolls grew by 97,000 in February, with a net upward revision of 55,000 for the December and January reports. The median length, or duration, of unemployment fell 8 percentage points in the last year, while non-management wages increased 4.1 percent, almost twice the inflation rate.

The U.S. job-creating machine is firing on all cylinders. Significant GDP-slowing inventory corrections in housing and manufacturing couldn’t stop it, nor could unusually bad February weather. Get this: According to Wall Streeter Joe LaVorgna, 505,000 people couldn’t get to work because of bad weather last month, the highest number in ten years and twice the normal seasonal weather effect of the past five Februarys. Yet jobs still rose substantially, and next month’s report will likely include another positive payback revision.

It’s also a quality jobs boom: Americans with a high-school diploma registered a 4.3 percent unemployment rate (slightly less than the national average), those with some college education had a 3.6 rate, and those with a bachelor’s degree or higher had a rock-bottom 1.9 percent rate.

The biggest dilemma in the jobs stats is the 7.1 percent unemployment rate for people with less than a high-school diploma. But taxing the rich will not solve this. Education reform, such as parental school choice and merit pay for teachers, will.

But why the silence from McCain, Romney, and Giuliani on all the good news? Despite the headwinds of war and recession six years ago, the Reagan-Bush tax-cut model has again spurred a long-lasting, job-creating economic expansion. Even Bill Richardson, the Democratic governor of New Mexico who is a card-carrying member of the nearly extinct tax-cutting school launched by JFK, has been silent on all this. Continued...

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About The Author

Lawrence Kudlow is host of CNBC's Kudlow & Company

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Romney is about winning, and that's all.
Romney's one consistent political trait is that he says what needs to be said at the time. The problem is that he says such things with serious enough conviction that he can't be trusted. So far as I have seen on all the ancient and modern videos, he doesn't say "I support the compromise of allowing homos to marry, because it is the will of the electorate." What he says is, "I am and always will be more pro-homosexual than Ted Kennedy," until he wins.

The problem with this is that we don't know if he might well be another Harry Reid (another famous Mormon involved in politics), or where he really stands.

He doubles the problem with this religion, because he disingenuously (sp?) tries to claim that there is no significant difference between Mormonism and Christianity. As an evangelical Christian, I could vote for an atheist, a Catholic, a Buddhist, or anyone else of any religion, but not when the candidate is trying to muddy the waters merely to get my vote and appear more mainstream.

So he loses my vote because I can't trust him.

Kudlow Doesn't Know Romney
TriciaCT is right. Romney has rather frequently talked about the benefits of the cuts and has pledged to make deeper tax cuts. This is rather easy to discover with a few glances at Romney's speeches and press releases. Mr. Kudlow comes across looking a little foolish for not doing his homework on Romney before writing this article.
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