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Readers sometimes ask why I occasionally write columns advising Democrats on
how they could gain some political advantage by adopting certain policies. After
all, as a Republican, don't I want my party to win? Why am I helping the enemy?
The answer is that I 'm a Republican only because, historically, it has more
closely represented the libertarian views I hold. My goal is good policy, not
victory for my team.
The fact is that there is no real alternative for libertarians interested in having
some influence on national policy and politics. The Libertarian Party is a joke
and, anyway, there is really no place for third parties in the American electoral
system. The requirement that presidents must gain an absolute majority in the
Electoral College effectively means that we can never have more than two major
parties.
Third parties just end up defeating the party closest to them ideologically by
splitting the vote, thereby leading to victories by the party to which they are more
opposed. A good example is Ross Perot's third party effort in 1992, which only
had the effect of defeating George H.W. Bush and electing Bill Clinton. Most of
Perot's voters were Republicans who simultaneously believed that Bush had not
done enough to reduce the deficit and that the 1990 budget deal was a mistake
because it raised taxes.
Of course, there is always the possibility that a third party could supplant one of
the major parties. But that has only happened once in American history, when the
Republican Party replaced the Whig Party as the principal opposition to the
Democrats. However, that was a unique situation in which the deep and
fundamental issue of slavery divided the country in a way that no other issue ever
has. The Whigs tried to straddle the issue and lost out to the forthright anti-
slavery of the Republicans.
I see no issue of similar magnitude on the horizon that could cause the kind of
national cleavage that might open the way for one of the major parties to self-
destruct. The only issue I observe that even comes close would be a generational
divide between the elderly, who are the recipients of massive and growing income
transfers, and the young who will pay exorbitant taxes to finance those transfers.
But I don't think this will happen because taxes are going to rise very gradually
and because the young will expect to get their share when they turn 65. Also, as
the government takes over all aspects of care for the elderly, their children are
relieved of personal responsibility. The Medicare drug bill that has just passed
Congress, for example, will be a kind of tax cut for those who would otherwise
have had to pay for their parents' prescription drugs. Indeed, the Roosevelt
Administration originally sold Social Security to the young exactly this way.
I also think it is possible to minimize the burden on future generations by
instituting policies that will sustain a high level of economic growth. This is
where I really part ways with Democrats, since they just don't understand
economics at all, in my view. They are obsessed with envy and always want to
raise taxes on the "rich." But these taxes eventually end up on the working class
because they shrink the capital stock and diminish entrepreneurship, which slows
real economic growth and wages. In the end, the cost of the Democrats' "soak the
rich" policies is just too high.
Moreover, Democrats have absurd faith in government to fix things, no matter
how much experience shows that its intervention usually makes things worse.
Perhaps the stupidest proposal of the entire campaign so far is that by Howard
Dean, the leading Democratic candidate, to re-regulate the American economy if
elected. Not only is this dumb substantively, but he threw away any hope of
getting votes from libertarians sympathetic to his views on foreign policy and
civil liberties.
Still, it is important for America to have a strong Democratic Party in order to
keep Republicans honest and provide competition for ideas. When Democrats
don't provide effective opposition, it allows Republicans to get away with things
they know they shouldn't be doing, like enacting huge new entitlement programs,
imposing protectionist trade policies, and raiding the Treasury for give-aways to
Republican constituencies. I only wish that Democratic opposition to the drug
bill had been more effective, so as to kill this monstrosity in its crib. But they did
a better job on the pork-laden energy bill and helped deep-six that abomination,
for which I am grateful.
Unfortunately, I don't see Democrats getting their act together next year to regain
either the White House or Congress. As a Republican, I am sorry to see that
because my party needs them in order to avoid corrupting itself.
Bruce Bartlett is a Senior Fellow with the National Center for Policy Analysis.
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