Conservative candidates suffered humiliating losses in this year’s elections. Fiscal Conservatives such as Lincoln Chafee lost. Democrats threaten to govern from the center, turning conservatives into a minority of the minority. Milton Friedman, the patron saint of free-market economics, died on Nov. 16. Just yesterday, Sen. Charles E. Schumer (D-N.Y.) declared to the New York Daily News editorial board that “Reaganomics is dead.”
Many would thus assume that this has been a bad year for fiscal conservatives, but this simply isn’t the case. While all Republicans had a lousy year, fiscal conservatives gloom was lost on Election Day, when the GOP lost control of Congress.
The last few years of the Bush administration and its rubber stamp Congress have been marked by large tax cuts to the rich and very much so increased spending. This is not fiscal conservatism. Follow me to a simple household example. Your parents give you a $20 dollar allowance. For the sake of example, this is the tax you collect from your parents. You then spend money on programs, that is at the mall. If you calculatedly give your parents a tax break, by reducing you allowance to $10, (like the Bush tax cuts) and then at the same time increase spending at the mall, or in real terms agenda programs and wars, you end with large deficits. That is to say, if you spend more then you bring in; you destroy all the ideals of fiscal conservatism.
While the coming of the devils, (the newly elected Democratic majority) must seem like a horror to fiscal conservatives, in truth the new Congress will be much more in line with fiscally conservative views. Democrats have for ages been labeled as over spenders, who increase too many taxes. However there has been a shift to the right in the mainstream Democratic economic platform. For example there is a group of Democratic House freshmen who won seats in conservative districts, including the Florida seat that was held by disgraced Rep. Mark Foley, and Tom DeLay’s former seat in Texas are much more fiscally conservative then the Republicans they replaced. Further mainstream Democrats have made many promises to balance the budget and work to reduce the debt, most likely via reductions in the Bush tax cuts, and Bush spending on Iraq and other programs, similar to previous Republican platforms. Fiscally conservative Republicans such as Lincoln Chafee and Olympia Snow have been abandoned by their party. The small government and limited spending fiscal conservatives have been abandoned by the Republicans as the entire partisan political system has shifted to the right over the past twenty years, and now fiscal conservatives can find themselves more in line with Democrats.
Also with the GOP now in the minority, they will have to return to their “budget hawk,” fiscally conservative role, only further benefits fiscal conservatives. “Now that Republicans are in the opposition, they’re going to be the most saintly budget hawks you can imagine,” said American Enterprise Institute economist Kevin A. Hassett. As soon to be former Speaker of the House, Dennis Hassett put it, “being in the minority requires increased fiscal responsibility.” The point is, fiscal conservatives can look to a bright future because of the Democratic check to the Bush spending programs.
This was obviously a bad year for Republicans, but for Fiscal Conservatives the coming of the Democrats should be seen as a god send.