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Friday, August 10, 2007
Michael  Franc :: Townhall.com Columnist
Small Government Efforts Aren't 'Fringe'
by Michael Franc
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Principled conservative lawmakers have been called many things as they doggedly pursue their quest for smaller government. In the House, liberals have resorted to using the “f” word -- “fringe” -- to describe small-government conservatives who have tried in vain to cut spending, eliminate frivolous earmarks, and reform failed welfare programs.

Others call them names. Recently, Rep. John Olver (D-Mass.) derided House conservatives as “jihadists” and “nihilists.” Rep. Tim Ryan (D-Ohio) said that “getting lectures on fiscal responsibility from the Republican Party is like getting lectures on animal welfare from [football star] Michael Vick.”

Ouch.

But even the most acerbic partisan must have recoiled at the vitriol Rep. David Scott (D-Ga.) spewed during an otherwise routine floor debate. “This amendment is drastic,” he began. “It is costly. It is inefficient. It is impossible to administer.”

Then Scott moved in for the rhetorical kill. The amendment was “mean-spirited,” he said. “But not only is it mean-spirited. It is, indeed, bigoted … It is an insult to the Congress of the United States. And I submit it is … beneath the dignity of the Congress to even entertain this amendment.”

Why such unbridled animosity?

The amendment’s sponsor, mild-mannered Rep. Jeb Hensarling (R-Texas), was taken aback. After all, he was only seeking to instill in the Section 8 housing voucher program the commonsense notion that “federal assistance should be temporary” and based on “work and self-sufficiency and responsibility and personal dignity.”

Specifically, Hensarling proposed a modest work requirement for able-bodied adults who have benefited from Section 8 housing assistance for seven years if they wish to continue receiving their $550, on average, monthly housing allowance. Section 8 is a federal program that allows low-income families to lease or purchase privately owned housing. His amendment also would have exempted mothers of young children who cannot secure adequate childcare from the work requirement.

Hensarling sought to extend the successful 1996 reform to federal housing programs. Under the old system, recipients weren’t required to engage in any significant activities to receive aid. This arrangement promoted idleness, single parenthood and poverty. The 1996 reforms, by contrast, required welfare recipients to engage in constructive activities such as supervised job search, training and community service. To the astonishment of liberal defenders of the old system, the new work requirement … well, worked. Welfare caseloads plummeted (from 5.1 million families in 1994 to 1.9 million families today), employment among single parents doubled, and child poverty fell to record lows.

Yet federal housing programs were untouched by the 1996 reforms. The failures of the old system are intact -- federal housing assistance is a one-way handout and recipients don’t have to work. Not surprisingly, the Census Bureau reports that 30% of households with children receiving federal housing aid don’t work at all and only a quarter of parents worked full-time (defined as 2,000 hours) through the year.

To Hensarling and other conservative lawmakers, the impact of requiring recipients of housing assistance to work for their benefit would be profound. As my colleague Robert Rector explains: “Once recipients are required to be continuously active rather than idle, they have a strong incentive to obtain employment. The indirect result is a surge in actual employment and a drop in poverty.”

Rep. Scott, though, sensed something sinister behind Hensarling’s effort to reduce poverty. “I understand messages,” he said mockingly, “and I understand this message” -- one aimed at those “who believe that certain people are categorized as wanting a handout, or that they are lazy, or that they do not want to work. So then the cry comes, before we can give them any help, make them work. Make them get a job.”

Sounds good to most Americans. Far from being a “fringe” position, reducing dependency on government programs is a mainstream American value. According to the Pew Research Center, 69% of Americans, including 61% of African-Americans, agree that “poor people have become too dependent on government assistance programs.”

Though Hensarling’s effort fell short, it garnered a respectable 197 votes, including those of all but 6 Republicans and 13 mostly moderate Democrats.

Remarkably, a decade after the most successful domestic policy initiative in living memory, the race card remains in play. “When you run out of anything else to say,” Hensarling said, “you characterize someone else’s motivations and … use the term ‘bigoted.’ And that I regret.”

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About The Author

A long-time veteran of Washington policymaking, Mike Franc oversees Heritage's outreach to members of the U.S. House and Senate and their staffs.

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We're the problem
Ronald Reagan said, "government isn't the solution to our problems....government is the problem". Well, during the six years we ran all three branches of the federal government, our party expanded government like crazy. Drunk with power, Republicans became the problem. Banning things they didn't care for, like Internet poker (see my blog) while spending like drunken sailors, Republicans changed the definition of the word "big government".

Of course no one believes us now, when we oppose Democrat programs by claiming the mantle of "small government". Not after the prescription drug bill. Not after the earmarks for almost every Republican district. Not after the hijacking of the party by social conservatives who apparently are still drunk with (former) power.

Now, Republicans still talk about our former values, but their vestigal ideas now, rather than beliefs. They support gun rights, but they don't know why. They certainly don't believe citizens should have the ability to counter the government. They claim to support low taxes, but they won't couple this with low spending, which is exactly the opposite purpose of the original idea.

If we walked the walk while in power, we'd still be there.

Liberal power
Liberalism, to survive must keep as many people as possible dependent upon government.

WE'RE THE PROBLEM, PART II
The Republican Party needs to be completely reorganized so that the Rockefeller Republican dominated RNC, NRSC, NRCC, and state Republican parties would be lean, seasonal operations with little power, acting in supporting, not leading roles. Greater power ought to be given to the conservative base activists who were born into and have lived all or most of their lives under real world conditions.

Under present conditions, a true blue conservative has little chance of winning. The Rockefeller Republicans have the ability to call the shots and cut off the money supply to conservatives.

No law requires you to give to one of these Rockefeller Republican dominated entities. Conservatives ought to give to individual candidates worth supporting.

Conservatives want more than simply being able to keep more of their money. They want people who will stand for principles.

Republicans must never again nominate a Presidential candidate from a wealthy Rockefeller Republican political family. The disease of liberalism will always be there, regardless of the candidate's rhetoric.

In retrospect, perhaps Republicans should have allowed Algore to win in 2000. If Bush had lost in 2000, he might today be just another also-ran with limited influence.


Pot, meet Kettle
Funny article! I thought for sure it was going to call to task infighting Republicans calling candidates who REALLY want to cut government functions/spending "fringe."

I thought it would be an article, long overdue, enumerating the benefits of voting for a candidate like Ron Paul, who wants to eliminate whole bureaucratic departments.

No such ruck.

The Republicans (all except Congressman Paul) are losing their base because of profligate spending. If the party has any sense, they will nominate Congressman Ron Paul for President.

Only he can win it for the Republicans in 2008.

Woe be unto the...
...conservative that suggests people be required to pay their way and, just maybe, leave the liberal plantation.

Dependent people are the liberal's power base, and the latter knows exactly how to destroy someone if that power is threatened.

A fool's errand
"Also the abolition of the Federal Reserve and income tax, and the return to sound money based on an objective standard of value, will help prevent tasks that are properly to be carried out at state or local level"

Will. Never. Happen. The Federal Reserve controls our paper currency, and the notion that money has an objective standard of value is as wrong-headed as classical economics or Ron Paul's notion of a Bretton-Woods fixed exchange rate system.

Economics is a field that has moved on to Neoclassical economics, and money, like anything else, whether it be clothing or food, etceteras, has no objective value. Its value is determined by a supply from the Federal Reserve and a willingness to pay (demand) for as it represents a store of value. To say that it has an objective value is wrong. That it should be tied to a particular precious metal is a wrong-headed idea. Let the demand for currency play out in the free market like any other good or service. It costs nothing to administer that way.

A fool's errand
Abolishing the income tax is also wrong-headed. The income tax represents a relatively stable revenue source for the Federal government, unlike the so-called Fair Tax which would mean high or low revenues depending on the business cycle -- a bad thing when you might be say, fighting a war. It will also introduce gross amounts of deadweight loss by altering relative prices so we can spare some goods from being taxed due to common consumption, or extreme consumption by the poor. Furthermore, it will incentivize saving, which is all well and good for individual homeowners, but is lousy for an overall economy. While there's certainyl diminishing returns if you put all your eggs in one basket, at the same level consumption does more than investment to spur growth.

Small government services for activities without economies of scale? Fine. But let's be sensible about how and where we downsize government. I have yet to hear a cry for disbanding the army and going back to purely state militias, nor would I ever want to.

The reason
they get labled fringe etc. are numerous. First and foremost though is because the media has covered and quit reporting on failing institutions coupled with the fact that it easy to point a finger to the poor and accuse any conservative of wanting to starve them. It's simpleton logic that is easily exploited as we lose our values and our intellect.

It's sinister
beyond description, and bigoted too, to explore anyone receiving any type of federal or state assistance to actually plan to get OFF of it and/or to get a job. My goodness, what could they have been thinking to even suggest it? Such lunatic thinking certainly deserves some hot-blooded name-calling from the Democrats, doesn't it? After all, what are we if we are not tax-and-spend?

If Federal government
were actually made smaller--I guess there would be only the three branches and the armed forces. Would we then be a loose coalition of states that were more like the city states of Germany were? Does anyone know of a book that describes how this would work?

Oh, yeah. They're fringe.
After 6 years of the Bush administration and his record spending Congress, I find it hard to believe there are any small-government, principled Republicans in Washington at all. But for the sake of argument, let's say there are a couple.

However many there are, we've certainly never heard of them, and that means they're fringe. Republicans are the party of big-government. Democrats are the party of slightly bigger-government.

Don't try to act like conservatives support small government. It's an outrageously fraudulent claim that has been overwhelmingly disproved every day since Bush was first inaugurated.

Ronald Reagan hijacked the big-government Republican party for 8 years. Newt did the same for about 3 years. Other than 11 years, when popular, principled men forced small-government policies on the big-government Republican establishment, the Republican party has always been little Democrats. Just look at the statist Presidential candidates leading the Republican pack.

Our government is the greatest danger to freedom, liberty, and prosperity we face. Both Republicans and Democrats fight on the side of government against the people. The only way to win is to vote 3rd party.

Everyone Wants Their Business to Grow
The elite class that make up government & many institutions surrounding gvmt e.g. the pop media, are motivated by their own empowerment, enrichment, & aggrandizement. Everyone would like the business they happen to be in to be in demand, and growing. Thet's a nice position to be in. No one likes to be in a slow business, an industry being "downsized," or having surplus divisions sold off or closed.

It just so happens that government is in a position to artificially create demand for itself and arbitrarily grow any where & any way it wants to, provided that pesky ol' Constitution is deconstructed & ignored. That's what Big Sugar Daddy Pork Barrel Welfare State is all about: government becoming the sole source of people's livelihoods & all goods. A whole population is being supported in return for voting their benefactors back in.

Ultimately, they want the "single payer" concept & permit-based regulation to spread to all commodities & economic activities. They want (& are close to achieving) the situation in which any restriction or partial shutdown of gvmt would paralyze the economy because the case-by-case permission of bureaucrats is increasingly necessary just to proceed with our lives & business.

That's why the elite leadership of both wings of the monopoly Republicrat Party, & their buddies in academia, the pop media, & so on, reject and demonize any suggestion of limiting or reducing govmt. Their livelihoods & career aspirations depend on government evolving toward a totalitarian monopoly.
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