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The Tea Party, Reagan, and Why We Fight

Much ink has been poured over the past 24 hours regarding Jeb Bush’s controversial remarks about the state of the Republican Party.  In a wide-ranging interview with Bloomberg News, Bush said the following:

“Ronald Reagan would have, based on his record of finding accommodation, finding some degree of common ground, similar to my dad, they would have a hard time if you define the Republican Party — and I don’t — as having an orthodoxy that doesn’t allow for disagreement,” he said. “We’re in a political system in general that is in a very different place right now.”

Whether Jeb Bush really meant to say that Reagan would be unacceptable to contemporary conservative activists or not (context is always important), that view has been expressed by a number of Republican officials since the advent of the Tea Party. Those sentiments regarding Reagan and how he would have governed in today’s climate have been echoed by a number of establishment members of the party.  Their short-sighted conjecture is lacking a trenchant grasp of the facts on many fronts.  Those who subscribe to this view fail to recognize the importance of the current political climate as compared to the one that existed when Reagan took office.

In that vein, I felt it would be useful to share a post I wrote last July that is pertinent to the current debate.  It was during the height of the imbroglio over the debt ceiling when establishment Republicans inside and outside of Congress were accusing us of undermining Boehner’s grand bargain.  People claimed that we would have run Reagan out of town back then as well.  Now, the debt ceiling deal is universally regarded as a failure, yet these same people will never admit that they were duped.  Nor do they apologize for their scandalous misuse of Reagan’s guiding principles to justify their capitulation.

Below the fold is the full piece:

Why We Fight

Extraordinary times require extraordinary measures and lots of courage

Over the past week, the Tea Party has been impugned and maligned with more ferocity than ever before.  Amidst our push to balance the budget, downsize job-killing government agencies and programs, and preserve our AAA credit rating, we have been condemned as extremists, suicidal, and traitors.  Sadly, most of these acrimonious ad hominem attacks were propagated by those who purport to share the aforementioned goals, but feel repulsed by our “intransigent” sense of urgency.  Some have even regurgitated Democrat talking points suggesting that Reagan would be labeled a RINO by the Tea Party.

These writers and commentators who supposedly share our ultimate goals for limited government, yet condemn our tactics and sense of urgency, are lacking a sober understanding of the severity of our current predicament in relation to Reagan’s era.

As grim as the situation was at the time of Reagan’s inauguration in 1981, it simply doesn’t compare to the magnitude of our problems precipitated by the growth of the federal government, the insolvent debt, and rampant government dependency.  Reagan came to power and fought for limited government in order to preclude the very eventuality that we are experiencing today.  Today, in 2011, we are suffering under every pernicious effect of a tyrannical government; the magnitude to which Reagan did not experience, but presciently attempted to avert.

Although Reagan succeeded in his fundamental goals of stalling the inexorable growth of government, cutting taxes, rolling back some regulations, and winning the Cold War, he realized at the end of his presidency that those victories were not sufficient to countermand the self-perpetuating growth of government dependency and tyranny.  He knew that due to factors which were mostly beyond his control he had failed to eliminate a significant number of agencies and programs that serve as the backbone for the statist society.

Reagan had learned that liberals had insidiously co-opted so many rent-seekers in government that it was impossible to win a war of attrition by fighting agency-to-agency and program-to-program warfare.  Fifty years of steady movement toward socialism had shown that any edict promulgated by the federal government, much like the ancient Persian government described in Esther, “may not be revoked.”  He realized that something drastic had to be done to prevent the immutable growth of government that he so ominously envisioned after his departure.

To that end, in 1987, Reagan proposed America’s Economic Bill of Rights.  Not only did his plan include a balanced budget amendment; it contained a 2/3 vote requirement for raising taxes, and a constitutional ban on price and wage controls (Reagan’s speech).  Some might have called it extreme; others might have condemned it as unrealistic; Reagan viewed it as imperative and indispensable for the future of the nation, even though the government was a fraction of its current size.

As the saying goes, the rest is history.  Reagan never saw his dream come to fruition.  Instead of electing leaders who would continue in his footsteps, Americans elected leaders to the White House and Congress that continued to augment the size of government, the dependency state, and all of its liberty-infringing, job-killing, income-destroying, and regressive price-hiking side effects.  Then, following the 2006 elections, we elected people who have grown government to such unparalleled levels that we are now on the precipice of incorrigible indebtedness, irrevocable dependency, and perennial economic stagnation.

Let’s borrow a sports analogy to conceptualize the magnitude of our current challenge and the commensurate degree of commitment that is required to solve it.  When you are down one or two touchdowns in a football game, you don’t play as if you are down four touchdowns.  But when you are down four touchdowns, by George, you better play as if you’re down six touchdowns.  Reagan’s presidency had predated much of the insurmountable socialism that we face today, yet he deemed it necessary to push constitutional amendments as a means of preempting further statist gains.  Now that we have lost all those points to the forces of statism, it is even more incumbent upon us to go for the big plays.

Historically, the growth of government statism has been irremediable.  For every “100 yards” that they have advanced, our most successful counteroffensive has only slowed their rate of advance by a few yards.  Now, after 80 years of soft-socialism, and 2 1/2 years of hard-Marxism, if nothing drastic is done, the government will control our healthcare sector, financial sector, and many other large components of our once proud free market.  In other words, we are down big in the Super Bowl of socialism.

At present, there are hundreds of government agencies, commissions, and offices (many more than in the 80s) that promulgate $1.75 trillion worth of regulations on our job-creators.  It is no wonder that a record number of Americans are not in the workforce.  Concurrently, those government monstrosities oversee 2,184 assistance programs, in which many of the recipients have been negatively affected by the initial government intervention.  In addition, there are 45 million Americans who are dependent on food stamps, 50 million enrolled in Medicaid, while more than half of all Americans receive some sort of payout from the government.  That is the double-edged sword that has been foisted upon us by the inane cycle of government dependency and destruction.

As dependent as the citizenry is on the government, the government is just as dependent upon every citizen for its indebtedness.  At the current pace, in just 20 years, every man, woman, and child will be responsible for over $100,000 in debt.  This is merely a cursory glimpse into the leviathan public policy challenge that awaits us.

Just as Obama’s failed presidency has provided us with unparalleled challenges, it has provided us with historic opportunities.  Obama, through his vivid demonstration of failed socialism, has been a more effective advocate for limited government than any conservative leader.  An overwhelming majority of the public supports limited government, low taxes, a balanced budget, and repeal of Obamacare.  Moreover, as the public continues to see how Obama’s policies engender economic decline, Obama’s disapproval continues to rise.  He is now virtually unelectable among Independent voters – the very demographic that the incrementalists on our side claim are repulsed by the Tea Party.

We feel that now is the time to harness our historic mandate, instead of punting it for some unrealistic future political era, in which there are no verifiable means to ensure success.  Nor is there any reason to believe that those responsible will have more fortitude to make those bold decisions that they are currently avoiding.

We must remember that good friends can disagree on how to implement shared goals.  But, at some point, there must be a sense of urgency that will unite us all to make bold decisions.  Yes, perhaps even more bold and “extreme” than those implemented by Reagan in the ’80s.  And you know what?  Reagan would have done the same thing.  After all, we live in extreme times – times that Reagan tried to avoid with extreme constitutional measures.

In that sense, we are the Reagan Revolution of our generation.  And regarding the forceful push for a constitutional amendment limiting government, the Tea Party is the Reagan Revolution 2.0.

Looking down from heaven, Reagan would be proud of the newly organized “mob of extremists” that he so profoundly inspired.

COMMENTS

  • commonsenseobserver

    …our determination, our courage and our strength.

  • Lock_Piatt

    The current situation was predicted this man -

    I cannot help fearing that men may reach a point where they look on every new theory as a danger, every innovation as a toilsome trouble, every social advance as a first step toward revolution, and that they may absolutely refuse to move at all.
    Alexis de Tocqueville

  • wordwaryor

    Well Done Mr. Horowitz

    You have said it far better than anyone I have read or heard at any time. Our situation is no longer approaching desperate ….. It IS quite desperate. For unless Barack Obama loses, and we gain control of the behemoth of government and wield the Axes and Swords that slice of huge portions of this beast …….. we may never get as great a chance.

    What bothers me to no end, is that so huge a segment of our fellow Americans are totally oblivious to the Danger we are truly in. And seemingly do not care at all. I have to have some hope that they would care if they only could be persuaded to open their sleepy eyes and SEE the disaster that looms upon us and our nation’s future.

    The future of our children is truly at stake. Will they ever live in land of Freedom and Liberty ? Or will they taste the bitter whip of Totalinarianism because we failed to do our duty, to rise up and effectively fight this monstrous tyranny that even now chews upon the flesh of our beloved nation ?

    God Bless the Tea Party !
    God Bless America !

    Wordwaryor

  • thx1138v2

    The left in America has gone so far left for so long that the “center” or “moderate”, as the Republican establishment would like to have it, is now between Communism and Socialism. That makes the traditional American liberal, who incidentally loathes Obama, a RIGHT winger.

    Hugo Chavez says he considers Fidel Castro to be to the right of Obama.

    Moving to the “centrist” or “moderate” position while the left has been moving in only one direction – further and further left – is what has got us to where we are – a rudderless nation in debt over our heads.

    Enough already.

  • krish

    Below I have attached the article by Art Laffer (from Reagan administration) & Steve Moore (WSJ) – detailed spending record.

    http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052702303753904577450910257188398.html?mod=googlenews_wsj

    Fiscally, GW Bush started the spending spree – especially spent the money on social programs & bailing out Wall street fat cats! Other than Michael Savage & some instanes Levin, none of the conservaties who are shouting the loudest now (especially Rush who had always argued that deficit is no big deal!) kept their mouth shut or only mentioned it in passing when Bush was doing the same thing as Obama!

    As conservatives, we need to be objective and make sure we do Not give a pass to Republicans, We got to keep the pressure on Romney otherwise it will be another GW Bush term! Also it is time to throw the big spending republicans such as Boehner, McConell, out so that we have the moral authrity to discuss about dems spending ways. Other than few conservatives in power & a couple of people in talk show, most others have been hypocrites when it comes to spending issues!

    I

  • gekster

    And I would like to see anyone who actually knows just how Romney would be as President.

  • acat

    Finally, if Bush spent like a sailor on leave, Obama’s spending like a whole squad.

    Bush’s feet were held to the fire – repeatedly. Your attempt at equivalence is … strange at a time when we’re supporting the nominee.

    Mew

  • http://libertynews.com/ mbecker908

    Bush was no conservative and he’s been roundly criticized here at RS and frequently by me. There is, however, NO comparison to the current occupant of the WH.

    You’re an idiot for even making the comparison.

  • http://impudent.edublogs.org/ kyle8

    spending is four times faster since then. So no, you are incorrect, Obama is four times worse.

  • funwithknives

    G H W Bush and it showed.The Apple is lying below the tree,here.

    As much as I ‘like’ Jeb, I do not agree with him in the slightest, regarding this topic.

    Ronnie would have embraced the TEA Party ,and been emboldened by it. Would he have jumped in with both feet? Doubtful, but he was a ‘Hope’ kinda’ guy. He would have seen the advantage to a core support, and encouraged it’s expansion.

    IMHO what you see here {Re: Jeb’s proclimation} is someone else{Obama, anyone?} channeling Reagan in their own ,seemingly narrow view.

    Somebody go get Mike and ask him what he thinks. I suspect he’s second the above comments, bur that’s just me…………

  • krish

    Not letting Obama off the hook — we all know that he is a socialist! I am saying where was the outcry among conservatives when Republicans do the spending! Bush had both the senate & house – what happened? See what the authors say about Bush & his spending ways! Let us not forget how budget numbers are done in DC – spending increases are on top of the increase from last year (increase by Obama would be on top of the Bush increase!). Because there is no real cut in anything – as many elected Republicans would like you to believe!!

    I am thankful for the Tea Partyers – they are the only hope for change & salute their commitment (able to give their time when times are so tough!). I wish we had a Tea Party active during Bush terms – may be, we would not have had Obama!

    I see conservatives pull their punches when Republicans are in power. Red State (especially Erik & others) call it as they see it! It is the main reason why so many of us are drawn to this forum!

  • http://www.hakubi.us/ Neil Stevens

    Funny, your post history shows you always letting Obama completely off the hook.

    All you ever do is bash Republicans.

    Are you a Republican?