Depends on your citizenry, but either way, this is the best-non partisan-lay-the-facts-bare-description of what you�re faced with, American
Citizen, in you 2004 vote, and World Citizens, who you're dealing with in the sandbox. The insert commentary is mine.
GOP: The Party Of Social Intrusion, Corporate Control, And Big Government
The Republican Party has been in charge of the national agenda for almost three years now Democratic majorities in Congress don't crimp George W.
Bush's style the way they did for his father or Ronald Reagan when they were in office.
We have thus had an unobstructed view of what the
21st-century version of the party looks like. It's very clear this is not the father's G.O.P.
The most striking thing about the new Republicanism is the way it embraces
big government. The Bush administration has presided over a
$400
billion expansion of Medicare entitlements (
something I�m for on paper, but not the way they left it up to Pharma & Insurance industry
discretion). The party that once campaigned to abolish the Department of Education has produced an education plan that involves unprecedented
federal involvement in local public schools. There is talk from the White House about a grandiose new moon shot. Budgetary watchdogs like the Heritage
Foundation echo the Republican Senator John McCain's complaint about "drunken sailor" spending.
All this has left Democrats spluttering over their own hijacked agenda while old-style Republican conservatives despair.
"We have come loose from
our moorings," Senator Chuck Hagel of Nebraska concluded as Congress left Washington at the end of the year. It was probably inevitable that a
big central government would
look a whole lot better to Republicans when they got control of it.(
see: Mussolini style Fascism, it�s that
level of overreach) And since this page tends to favor activist government, we have little reason to complain when the Bush administration agrees.
What has happened to the Republicans does not seem to reflect an actual shift in ideology; indeed, the philosophic center of this administration is
hard to pin down. Yet whatever the reason,
some formerly reliably Republican doctrines seem to have disappeared (
all the ones that use to
get my vote, it seems). Federalism is a case in point. After decades of extolling state governments as the best laboratory for new ideas,
Republicans in Washington have been resisting state experimentation in areas ranging from pollution control to antispam legislation to prescription
drugs.
Late-20th-century Republicanism was an uneasy alliance of social conservatives who were
comfortable with government intervention in citizens'
lives when it came to morality issues and libertarians who wanted as little interference as possible. That balancing act ended on 9/11. Since
then, the Justice Department has enlarged the intrusive powers of government by, among other things, authorizing "sneak and peek" searches of
private homes and suspending traditional civil liberties for certain defendants. The story of the military chaplain who was arrested apparently
mistakenly as a suspected terrorist and then wound up being publicly humiliated with a public vetting of his sex life seems like a summary of a
libertarian's worst fears of an overreaching federal government. (Politics of personal destruction - a long time cornerstone of Bush style
politics)
The Republicans' newly acquired activism, however,
has very clear limits. The modern party's key
allegiance is to corporate America,
and its tolerance for intrusive federal government
ends when big business is involved. If there is a consistent center to the domestic
philosophy of the current administration, it is the idea that business is best left alone. The White House and Congress have chipped away at
environmental protections that interfere with business interests on everything from clean air to use of federal lands.
The administration is
determined to deliver on corporate America's goal of cutting overtime pay for white-collar workers. At the same time, it has been tepid in
asserting greater federal
vigilance over the developing
scandal of workplace safety.
Republicans have always enjoyed their reputation as the champions of business. The difference now is that they no longer couple their
business-friendly attitudes with tight-fistedness. Discretionary spending has
jumped 27 percent in the last two years; budget hawks complain
Congressional pork is up more than
40 percent. Some of that money has gone to buy the allegiance of wavering party members in the closely
divided House and Senate, but much of it is directly tied to the demands of big business. Agriculture subsidies to corporate farms have swollen to new
heights, while energy policy has been reduced to a miserable grab bag of special benefits for the oil, gas and coal companies. The last Bush energy
bill, which passed the House but died in the Senate, seems likely to be remembered most for the
now-famous subsidy for an energy-efficient Hooters
restaurant in Louisiana.
The two halves of Republican policy no longer fit together. A political majority that believes in big government for people, and little or no
government for corporations, has produced an unsustainable fiscal policy that combines spending on social programs with pork and tax cuts for the
rich. Massive budget deficits have been the inevitable result. Something similar happened in the Reagan administration. But unlike Ronald Reagan,
Mr. Bush has given
no hint of a midcourse adjustment to repair revenue flow. In fact, his Congressional leaders talk of still more tax cuts
next year to extend the $1.7 trillion already enacted. That would compound deficits, which could reach
$5 trillion in the decade.
This, it appears, is what compassionate conservatism really means. The conservative part is a stern and sometimes intrusive government to regulate the
citizenry, but with a hands-off attitude toward business. The compassionate end involves some large federal programs combined with unending sympathy
for the demands of special interests. If only it all added up.
www.nytimes.com...