Thank you, Rahm Emanuel! Mr. Emanuel, a
Democratic congressman from Illinois and former senior policy adviser
to President Clinton, recently published several election-year policy
proposals on the opinion page of The Wall Street Journal.
The timing of Emanuel’s article was
magnificent. The Democratic nomination campaign had degenerated into
neurotic angst over whether the eventual nominee would have different
biological plumbing or more skin pigmentation than any previous nominee
for the U.S. presidency. Most of us could care less if the president is
a purple neuter as long the policies advocated are acceptable, so
Emanuel performed a public service by focusing on substantive rather
than symbolic issues.
Although Emanuel’s proposals were standard
Democratic talking points—winking to the labor unions, proposing
increased government spending on education, health care, and
alternative energy sources—his proposals were clear and
straightforward. His essential political philosophy—shared by Clinton
and Obama—can be summarized in one word: “more,” as in, “more
government.” Indeed, from an economic standpoint, the elemental
political choice is always between more or less government. Do we want
more government control over our lives and livelihood or less? More
government spending and programs or less? More government power over us
or less?
One of the salient features of Election Year
2008 is how strongly and consistently the Democrats present the case
for more and how the Republican Party has failed to provide voters an
alternative by making the case for less.
Why is the philosophy of more dominating the
philosophy of less? One possible explanation is strategic. The
Democrats are politically smarter than the Republicans. Experience has
taught them the political foolhardiness of over-reaching. Many
Democrats still have socialistic biases, favoring government control
over market forces and government redistribution of wealth, but they
have toned down their rhetoric and taken their overt socialism
underground. They have become the modern American version of Britain’s
old Fabian socialists, content to expand government control in gradual
increments rather than in a rapid, convulsive revolution. Democrats
today are far too clever to say that if they could have their way,
government would take care of everything for us, but you know where
their heart is by the fact that on any economic issue, they will
invariably come down on the side of “more.”
If Republicans or libertarians ever want to
amass popular support for “less,” they will need to emulate the
Democrats’ gradualist strategy. Such a suggestion is anathema to libertarians,
but the political reality is that only a small percentage of Americans
are true believers in the polar ideologies of socialism on the left or
libertarianism on the right. The adherents of those philosophies will
have to settle for modest successes—either more government or less, not
total government or zero.
The libertarians continue to marginalize
themselves and render themselves ineffective by continuing to let the
perfect be the enemy of the good. If they ever hope to win national
elections in the United States, they will have to advocate incremental
steps toward less government, instead of an overnight demolition of it.
They might start by proposing to first freeze federal spending, and
then, when people see that it did not precipitate the end
of the world, propose cutting spending by two percent per year. They
might call for privatizing a few tasks currently performed by
government that could be handled by private firms as a first step to a
broader privatization. Instead of placing expiration dates on tax cuts,
as the Democrats forced President Bush to do, those who believe we need
less government should propose that various government spending
programs expire at year-end unless re-examined and reauthorized.
Of course, the main reason why the philosophy
of less isn’t championed by John McCain and most Republicans today is
because they simply don’t believe in it. The dominant wing of the
Republican Party in the last 50 years has been comprised
of those who want more government, though usually not as much as the
Democrats want—“Big Government Lite.”
Even the one Republican leader whose philosophy
was “less,” Ronald Reagan, failed to rein in government spending. Why?
Perhaps it is because “we the people” want Big Government. The growth
of government spending under Republican and Democratic presidents alike
can only persist because a democratic majority wants it. In that case,
“more” will remain in the ascendancy for some time to come—until things
get a lot worse from Big Government’s cumbersome meddling and enough
voters finally learn that Reagan was right when he said that government
is the problem and not the solution. Until that day, the only question
is: How fast will we travel on the road to more?