- MENU
- HOME
- SEARCH
- WORLD
- MAIN
- AFRICA
- ASIA
- BALKANS
- EUROPE
- LATIN AMERICA
- MIDDLE EAST
- United Kingdom
- United States
- Argentina
- Australia
- Austria
- Benelux
- Brazil
- Canada
- China
- France
- Germany
- Greece
- Hungary
- India
- Indonesia
- Ireland
- Israel
- Italy
- Japan
- Korea
- Mexico
- New Zealand
- Pakistan
- Philippines
- Poland
- Russia
- South Africa
- Spain
- Taiwan
- Turkey
- USA
- BUSINESS
- WEALTH
- STOCKS
- TECH
- HEALTH
- LIFESTYLE
- ENTERTAINMENT
- SPORTS
- RSS
- iHaveNet.com: Politics
by Kenneth T. Walsh
These are heady times for antitax activist Grover Norquist, the cerebral and energetic president of Americans for Tax Reform. The morale of conservatives is rising, and leaders on the right such as Norquist have high hopes of making big gains in the midterm elections this November. In a recent interview, Norquist talked about the mood of the voters, the state of the Obama presidency, and the tea-party movement of conservatives and populists that emerged last year in reaction to centralized power in Washington and ongoing increases in federal spending. Excerpts:
What is your assessment of the tea-party movement?
It's new blood and new activism, and that helps you win elections. And the big change in 2009 was the focus on spending, and I was pleasantly surprised. In two and a half months, people reacted negatively and strongly to "spend too much." Why did that happen this time and not in the past? I think the amount, the unseriousness of how they threw together the bank bailouts, the GM bailout, and the
President Obama held a much-publicized bipartisan healthcare summit in Washington. What's your evaluation?
If you're Obama and the Democrats, you want Republicans in the picture. Right now, you're in the picture, people are unhappy, and you want Republican fingerprints of some sort on the sausages you're making. But then their other thought is, 'Well, you Republicans are not helping, and we think you're bad because you're filibustering and you're being obstructionist.' I'm really not an advocate of sitting in a room with people who are toxic. I'm in favor of sending them memos.
What will be the eventual outcome on healthcare?
What they're going to try to do is muscle it through the
If the Republicans take control of
If the R's take the House, they can stop the bleeding. What can you undo? It will be issues that people run on at the national, state, and local levels. It's going to be a unified effort. Examples: Fiscal transparency. Texas is the state that's the most advanced on this. Every check the state of Texas writes goes online. Every contract the state of Texas enters into goes online. Second is a waiting period for any legislation [before it can be voted on, so the public can scrutinize the bill]. At the national level, [House Republican leader John] Boehner said you should have a 72-hour waiting period. My argument to him is to make it five working days, federal, state, and local. And then the idea of a BRAC commission at the federal level, dealing with spending [similar to the base realignment and closure commissions that recommend the closing of military bases]. How do you go back and fix stuff? Probably block granting is the most effective way to do that--give the states a lot more discretion. The other team threw
President Obama has created a deficit reduction commission to recommend ways of limiting red ink. Is it a good idea?
No, it's a dirty trick. It gives cover to the other team. They're not going to come up with something that Republicans will buy. The problem is it won't report until after the next election. They'll come up with
Congressional earmarks--special projects embedded in legislation--are a source of intense controversy in Washington. Is there a way that they can be minimized or eliminated?
Earmarks are the "broken windows" of government overspending. Earmarks are not the problem, and broken windows are not rape and murder, but when you look around and see there's graffiti and broken windows, everyone says there are no policemen here, and so people do rob and murder and misbehave. If every congressman is busy doing earmarks, they never get to tackling the big questions. Sometimes earmarks are necessary to buy Democratic votes for useful stuff. If I could do it, I'd say only Democrats should be able to get earmarks, no Republicans, because they're bad for your soul, and Democrats don't have souls anyway, so it really won't affect anything. [Earmarks] are used to bribe people to do things they wouldn't ordinarily do. There's one other idea. And that is the re-establishing at the national level the Harry Byrd [former independent senator from Virginia] committee. It was the committee on unnecessary government spending. They had the unappropriations committee. We've been going around suggesting, why don't we re-establish this? So if the Republicans, and I think they will, take the position, you give us the House and
Who is the national leader of the
There is not a leader of the
What is the essence of the
There are two kinds of issues. There are vote-moving issues, and there's everything else. Think of people around a table. Everybody's there for different reasons, but they're all there because on their key issue, what they want from the government is to be left alone. We don't all hang out together. We don't all live in the same neighborhoods. We don't necessarily like each other. But we all look at the candidate in the middle of the room, and he says, "I'm going to leave your guns alone and your kids alone and your faith alone and your money alone and your family alone and your business alone," and the people say, "OK, I'm with you on my key, vote-moving issue." And that's why the coalition holds together.
Available at Amazon.com:
The Political Fix: Changing the Game of American Democracy, from the Grassroots to the White House
AMERICAN POLITICS
WORLD | AFRICA | ASIA | EUROPE | LATIN AMERICA | MIDDLE EAST | UNITED STATES | ECONOMICS | EDUCATION | ENVIRONMENT | FOREIGN POLICY | POLITICS
Receive our political analysis by email by subscribing here
Grover Norquist says Republican Party has no Leader | Kenneth T. Walsh
© Tribune Media Services