Pete du Pont, writing in the Opinion Journal brings together all of the things that various Democratic politicians have been saying recently and lays out the agenda the House would follow under Democratic party control. Many of these items are not new to long-time readers here. I have discussed many of them, some many times. But du Pont's collection of everything in one place is instructive.
First, Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi has promised that election of a Democratic House would insure "a rollback of the [Bush] tax cuts." Rep. Charles Rangel of New York, who would be chairman of the Ways and Means Committee, would make sure no tax cut extension bill would ever get to the floor. He voted against the 2001 and 2003 Bush tax cuts and the bill that later extended the tax cuts until 2010 (as did all but seven of the 205 Democratic House members). In September Mr. Rangel said that he "cannot think of one" Bush tax cut he would agree to renew.
Investors Business Daily recently pointed out that since the Bush tax cuts took effect in 2003, "the economy has added $1.26 trillion in real output, $14.4 trillion in net wealth and 5.8 million new jobs." But that progress doesn't seem to matter to the liberals, whose primary goal is to raise income tax rates. "Taxing the rich" will be the leading economic argument of a 2007 Democratic House, and a rollback tax bill of some kind will reach the floor.
Second, President Bush will not be able to re-energize his effort for individually owned Social Security accounts, for "preventing the privatization of social security" is in the Democratic National Committee's "6-Point Plan for 2006." Democrats don't trust people to own or invest their own retirement funds–better to let a wise government do that, for as socialist Noam Chomsky says, "putting people in charge of their own assets breaks down the solidarity that comes from doing something together." And since Congress gets to spend Social Security tax receipts that aren't needed to pay benefits, letting people invest their payments in their own retirement accounts would be a costly revenue reduction that the new, bigger-spending Congress won't allow to happen.
"Reducing dependence on foreign oil" is a good Democratic goal, and there are a number of ways to accomplish it. Building more nuclear power plants is one. Offshore drilling for oil and natural gas is another. Oil reserves in the Outer Continental Shelf and Alaska could replace foreign oil imports for 25 years, and there is a known 19-year OCS supply of natural gas.
But liberal Democrats are opposed to all of these solutions. Hillary Clinton is opposed to the construction of nuclear plants and offshore drilling. Every Democratic senator on the Environment and Public Works Committee voted against allowing the building of new oil refineries on closed military bases. When the House voted 232-187 in June to allow and encourage OCS oil and natural-gas drilling, 155 of 195 Democrats voted to block it. The Democratic alternative is to eliminate the $18 billion the oil companies now get in various business tax deductions and thereby impose a higher income tax on them.
As for the war in Iraq, Mr. Rangel observed that "You've got to be able to pay for the war, don't you?" In other words, end it by simply defunding it. Rep. John Murtha of Pennsylvania calls for "immediate redeployment of U.S. troops" and intends to run for majority leader if the Democrats take control of the House. Ninety percent of House Democrats opposed the terrorist surveillance program, and 80% voted against the recent terrorist interrogation legislation.
Finally, when we see what the new leaders of a Democratic House are likely to do, their views are–well–very different from most Americans. Rep Henry Waxman of California would become the Government Reform Committee chairman, and believes domestic terrorist surveillance is "illegal." He would use his subpoena power to launch investigations to try and limit the president's anti-terrorism powers. (Emphasis added)
A spiral of investigations and partisan demagoguery lies in the future if enough people sit the election out. As du Pont points out, many of the people who would chair various committees have already announced that they will be seeking to investigate and impeach. There will be tax increases, there will be anti-business agendas, there will be weak national defense. I've said all along that I am of two minds about this election. I think that two years of raging Pelosi-ism on Capitol Hill will damage the Democratic party in the long run. That is not actually a good thing for a two party system. I think it would be harder for the Democrats to stand aside from actually solving anything then spend all their time pointing fingers if they took the House. But one thing should be apparent from looking at this list duPont has collected.
This really is an agenda at odds with the majority of Americans. Still think it's a good idea to sit this one out?




Let Bill Quick, Saint Andrew Sullivan and Derb have their little hissy fits. Concepts like agreeing to no spending vetos in exchange for war votes is totally beyond them. We’ll get along just fine without the “TRUE CONSERVATIVE” vote. Get ‘em fresh hankies, 95% of the actual voting population has no idea who they are.
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Good analysis.
I considered the ramifications of sitting this election out and decided that it was in my best interest to vote against the Democrats for all of the reasons du Pont makes in his Opinion Journal article.
I may not be completely satisfied with the GOP’s performance but it would be lunacy to give the election over to a political party that wants to cut funding for the war effort, treat terrorists like shop-lifters instead of the real threat that they are, obstruct intelligence gathering that will protect this country, ignore alternative energy sources, continue to destroy the public education system and raise my taxes so that the Socialist sect of the Democratic party can redistribute my hard-earned wages.
It’s hard to read du Pont’s piece past his uninformed commentary on Social Security, a commentary that dismisses the most important truth related to Social Security’s solvency, which truth I watched the ‘privatizers’ also avoid.
Pete du Pont said, “And since Congress gets to spend Social Security tax receipts that aren’t needed to pay benefits……” Whoa there, those tax receipts were and are needed to pay future benefits. Those ‘extra’ receipts were set up in 1983 during the Reagan presidency for the express purpose of building a long-term huge account that would one day be availabe precisely to adequately fund the baby boomers retirement years.
The contract with the boomers was that they would pay increased fica taxes all the rest of their working years, which they have done. But, the Congress that got the benefit of ‘borrowing’ those funds to do other government business ['including tax breaks for many who do not need to rely on Social Security] now want to ignore that 1983 contract with the working class, because they self-interestedly don’t want to have to find ways to now pay back the trillions from ‘borrowing’ from the very ones least able to handle retirement.
There is this smoke and mirrors rhetoric about changing the Social Security system, rhetoric designed to hide what amounts to breach of contract. I have done lots of research into this. I really lost faith in his honesty when President Bush went to WV to take the loan papers out of a vault and announced ‘See, no money here, just paper”.
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LOL! Go sue the Democrat Congress of 1983. Reminds me of "But Mama..he told me he loved me and promised to marry me if this happened……." I know, I know, Big Government will really, truly work if only we had the right people running it. /sarc. I suppose we could "tax their asses off" to pay for the next several decades of boomers and pray that someone will remember in 2027 the Contract With The Working Class of 1983. Or we could change it to work differently.
Quilly, your slip is showing…and your snarkiness, which seems to gloat about screwing people, doesn’t change the 1983 legislation which is still in effect and which applies to wage-earners of all years since 1983. Do you snark because you smirk at integrity and honesty? Whether government is big or small is irrelevant when government is dishonest.