Who's
Afraid of the Fiscal Cliff?
by
Patrick
J. Buchanan
Recently
by Patrick J. Buchanan: Is
Middle East Peace a Mirage?
Were the average
Republican asked for a succinct statement of his views on taxation,
he or she might respond thus:
"U.S. tax rates
are too high for the world we must compete in. The tax burden –
federal, state, local, together – is too heavy. We need to cut tax
rates to free up our private and productive sector and pull this
economy out of the ditch."
This core conviction
holds the party together.
Yet today the
leadership is about to abandon this conviction to sign on to higher
tax rates or revenues, while the economy is nearing stall speed.
Yet, two years ago, President Obama himself extended the Bush tax
cuts because, he said, you do not raise taxes in a recovering economy.
Why are Republicans
negotiating this capitulation?
Because they
have been warned that if they do not sign on to a tax hike, they
will take us all over a fiscal cliff.
If we go over,
Republicans are being told, you will be responsible for tax hikes
on all Americans as the Bush tax cuts expire on Jan. 1.
You will be
responsible for a surge in tax rates on dividends, interest, capital
gains, estates.
You will be
responsible for an automatic sequester catastrophic to the national
defense.
This is the
pistol Obama is pointing at the GOP. This is extortion.
Republicans
are being told that they either vote for something they believe
to be wrong and ruinous – or get something worse. Pay the ransom,
fellas, Obama is demanding, or take the blame for a second recession.
Like the Panama
Canal debate that made Ronald Reagan a hero, this is a defining
moment. No GOP senator who agreed to the Carter-Torrijos treaty
ever made it onto a national ticket.
What are the
perils for Republicans who sign on to an Obama deal?
They will sever
themselves permanently from much of the base of the party. While
their votes may ensure that tax rates or revenues rise, they will
have no assurance that the promised spending cuts will ever be made.
Even Reagan fell victim to this bait-and-switch.
Then, if the
tax hikes slow the economy, Republican collaborators will share
the blame. Not only will they have gone back on their word, they
will have damaged the recovery. What would be their argument for
re-election?
If you believe
higher tax rates or tax revenues would be like poisoning an already
weak economy, why would you collaborate in administering that poison?
Why not just say no?
Having lost
the presidency and seats in both houses, Republicans should not
partner with a president with whom they disagree on principle.
They should
act as the loyal opposition in a parliamentary system whose duty
it is to oppose, to offer an alternative agenda and to wait upon
the success or failure of the government, as Labor is doing in Britain
and the conservatives are doing in France.
What should
Speaker John Boehner do?
Tell the president
politely that America's problem is not that we are taxed too little
but that we spend too much – and the GOP will not sign on either
to tax rate or tax revenue increases. For Republicans believe that
would further injure the economy – especially an economy limping
along at between 1 and 2 percent growth.
Then Boehner
should depart the White House, go back up to the Hill and urge his
Republican caucus to do two things.
Pass an extension
of the Social Security payroll tax cut and block its automatic rise
from 4.2 percent of wages to 6.2 percent. To raise that tax now
and scoop off the discretionary income of most of America's families
in this anemic economy makes no sense economically or politically.
The House should
then vote to extend the Bush tax cuts for another year, with a pledge
to do tax reform – lowering tax rates in return for culling, cutting
or capping deductions for the well-to-do in the new year.
Then let Harry
Reid work his will. If the Senate votes to let Social Security taxes
rise, let Harry and his party explain this to the middle class that
gets hammered in January. If the Senate votes to let the Bush tax
cuts lapse for those over $200,000, decide in the caucus whether
to negotiate – or to go home for Christmas and New Year's.
As
for the automatic sequester that would impose $100 billion in cuts
next year, half in defense, do nothing. Let it take effect. The
budget has to be cut, and while these cuts are heavy on defense,
the depth and mixture can be adjusted in the new year.
If Republicans
walk away from tax negotiations with the White House, market investors,
anticipating a sharp rise in tax rates on dividends, interest and
capital gains next year, will start dumping stocks, bonds and investments
to take advantage of the last year of lower taxes.
The market
may tank. Let the party of high taxes explain it.
November
28, 2012
Patrick
J. Buchanan [send
him mail] is co-founder and editor of The
American Conservative. He is also the author of seven books,
including Where
the Right Went Wrong, and Churchill,
Hitler, and the Unnecessary War. His latest book is Suicide
of a Superpower: Will America Survive to 2025? See his
website.
Copyright
© 2012 Creators Syndicate
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