http://tinyurl.com/yht5p2t Bruce Bartlett is a former conservative columnist who quit years
ago out of frustration. He then wrote a book criticizing the Bush
administration for its irresponsible spending, destructive economic policies
and decisions based on politics rather than the good of the
nation. Unfortunately, Bartlett’s prediction of a severe
recession/depression came true. Fortunately, he has resumed writing weekly
columns.
His latest column is disgusting and incites anger. Bartlett
describes the hypocrisy of Republicans as they criticize Democrats for being
fiscally irresponsible:
The human capacity for self-delusion never ceases to amaze me, so
it shouldn't surprise me that so many Republicans seem to genuinely believe
that they are the party of fiscal responsibility. Perhaps at one time they
were, but those days are long gone.
This fact became blindingly obvious to me six years ago this month
when a Republican president and a Republican Congress enacted the Medicare drug
benefit, which former U.S. Comptroller General David Walker has
called "the most fiscally irresponsible piece of legislation since
the 1960s."
Recall the situation in 2003. The Bush administration was already
projecting the largest deficit in American history--$475 billion in fiscal year
2004, according to the July 2003 mid-session budget review. But a big election
was coming up that Bush and his party were desperately fearful of losing. So
they decided to win it by buying the votes of America's seniors by giving them
an expensive new program to pay for their prescription drugs.
Recall, too, that Medicare was already broke in every meaningful
sense of the term. According to the 2003 Medicare trustees report,
spending for Medicare was projected to rise much more rapidly than the payroll
tax as the baby boomers retired. Consequently, the rational thing for Congress
to do would have been to find ways of cutting its costs. Instead, Republicans
voted to vastly increase them--and the federal deficit--by $395 billion between
2004 and 2013.
However, the Bush administration knew this figure was not accurate
because Medicare's chief actuary, Richard Foster, had concluded, well before
passage, that the more likely cost would be $534 billion. Tom Scully, a
Republican political appointee at the Department of Health and Human Services,
threatened to fire him if he dared to make that information public before the
vote. (See this report by the
HHS inspector general and this article by
Foster.)
It's important to remember that the congressional budget
resolution capped the projected cost of the drug benefit at $400 billion over
10 years. If there had been an official estimate from Medicare's chief actuary putting
the cost at well more than that, then the legislation could have been killed by
a single member in either the House or Senate by raising a point of order.
Then-Senate Majority Leader Trent Lott, R-Miss., later said he regretted not
doing so.
Even with a deceptively low estimate of the drug benefit's cost,
there were still a few Republicans in the House of Representatives who wouldn't
roll over and play dead just to buy re-election. Consequently, when the
legislation came up for its final vote on Nov. 22, 2003, it was failing by 216
to 218 when the standard 15-minute time allowed for voting came to an end.
What followed was one of the most extraordinary events in
congressional history. The vote was kept open for almost three hours while the
House Republican leadership brought massive pressure to bear on the handful of
principled Republicans who had the nerve to put country ahead of party. The
leadership even froze the C-SPAN cameras so that no one outside the House
chamber could see what was going on.
Among those congressmen strenuously pressed to change their vote
was Nick Smith, R-Mich., who later charged that several members of Congress
attempted to virtually bribe him, by promising to ensure that his son got his
seat when he retired if he voted for the drug bill. One of those members, House
Majority Leader Tom DeLay, R-Texas, was later admonished by the
House Ethics Committee for going over the line in his efforts regarding Smith.
Eventually, the arm-twisting got three Republicans to switch their
votes from nay to yea: Ernest Istook of Oklahoma, Butch Otter of Idaho and
Trent Franks of Arizona. Three Democrats also switched from nay to yea and two
Republicans switched from yea to nay, for a final vote of 220 to 215. In the
end, only 25 Republicans voted against the budget-busting drug bill. (All but
16 Democrats voted no.)
Otter and Istook are no longer in Congress, but Franks still is,
so I checked to see what he has been saying about the health legislation now
being debated. Like all Republicans, he has vowed to fight it with every ounce
of strength he has, citing the increase in debt as his principal concern.
"I would remind my Democratic colleagues that their children, and every
generation thereafter, will bear the burden caused by this bill. They will be
the ones asked to pay off the incredible debt," Franks declared on Nov.
7.
Just to be clear, the Medicare drug benefit was a pure giveaway
with a gross cost greater than either the House or Senate health reform bills
how being considered. Together the new bills would cost roughly $900 billion
over the next 10 years, while Medicare Part D will cost $1 trillion.
Moreover, there is a critical distinction--the drug benefit had no
dedicated financing, no offsets and no revenue-raisers; 100% of the cost simply
added to the federal budget deficit, whereas the health reform measures now
being debated will be paid for with a combination of spending cuts and tax
increases, adding nothing to the deficit over the next 10 years, according to
the Congressional Budget Office. (See here for the
Senate bill estimate and here for the
House bill.)
Maybe Franks isn't the worst hypocrite I've ever come across in
Washington, but he's got to be in the top 10 because he apparently thinks the
unfunded drug benefit, which added $15.5 trillion (in present value terms) to
our nation's indebtedness, according to Medicare's trustees, was
worth sacrificing his integrity to enact into law. But legislation expanding
health coverage to the uninsured--which is deficit-neutral--somehow or other
adds an unacceptable debt burden to future generations. We truly live in a
world only George Orwell could comprehend when our elected representatives so
easily conflate one with the other.
Of course, there are good reasons conservatives oppose expanding
the government, as the pending health legislation would do, even if it adds
nothing to the deficit. But anyone who voted for the drug benefit, especially
someone who switched his vote to make its enactment possible, has zero
credibility. People like Franks ought to have the decency to keep their mouths
shut forever when it comes to blaming anyone else for increasing the national
debt.
Franks is not alone among Republicans for whom fiscal
responsibility never consists of anything other than talk. The worst,
undoubtedly, is DeLay, who actually went so far as to attack Sen. John McCain,
R-Ariz., last year for his principled vote against the drug benefit, one of
only nine Republican senators to do so. (By my count, there are still 24
Republicans in the Senate who voted for the drug benefit, including such
alleged conservatives as Jim Bunning and Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, John
Cornyn of Texas, Mike Crapo of Idaho, Orrin Hatch of Utah and Jon Kyl of
Arizona.)
Amazingly, leading Republicans still defend the drug benefit. Just
the other day, former Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist, R-Tenn., celebrated its
passage, and at a recent American Enterprise Institute forum, former House Ways
and Means Committee Chairman Bill Thomas, R-Calif., berated me for criticizing
it. In each case, their main argument was that it ended up costing a little
less than originally projected. Somehow, I doubt that Frist or Thomas would
feel the same way if their wives thought it was OK to buy a closet full of
expensive new shoes just because they were on sale.
I don't mean to suggest that Democrats are any better when it
comes to the deficit, although they have a better case for saying so based on
the contrasting fiscal records of Bill Clinton and George W. Bush. The national
debt belongs to both parties. But at least the Democrats don't go on Fox News
day after day proclaiming how fiscally conservative they are, and organize tea
parties to rant about deficits, without ever putting forward any plan for
reducing them. Nor do they pretend that they have no responsibility whatsoever
for projected deficits, at least half of which can be traced directly to
Republican policies, according to Office of Management and Budget Director Peter
Orszag.
It astonishes me that a party enacting anything like the drug
benefit would have the chutzpah to view itself as fiscally responsible in any
sense of the term. As far as I am concerned, any Republican who voted for the
Medicare drug benefit has no right to criticize anything the Democrats have
done in terms of adding to the national debt. Space prohibits listing all their
names, but the final Senate vote can be found here and the
House vote here.
Bruce Bartlett is a former Treasury Department economist and the
author of Reaganomics:
Supply-Side Economics in Action and Impostor:
How George W. Bush Bankrupted America and Betrayed the Reagan Legacy. Bruce
Bartlett's new book is: The New
American Economy: The Failure of Reaganomics and a New Way Forward. He
writes a weekly column for
Forbes.
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