http://www.iSteve.com/05JanA.htm#worst.of.both.worlds
A reader writes:
Unlike         Iraq, Congress is not simply going to vote to let Bush have at the         Social Security system.  The         reform bills are going to be debated over a longer period of time and         written in committees with chairmen used to exercising meaningful         decision-making authority, not simply rubberstamping Bush policies.          If a bill passes at all it will  probably take at least 1-2         years, if not longer.  By         the time it reaches implementation phase, the Bush administration will         be nearing its end.
       
        The reform debate is going to have a larger effect on the members of         Congress than it will Bush.  Dubya         will never have to face the voters again; any accomplishment on this         front will only go into the legacy scrapbook at his presidential         library.  Social Security is         one of those rare issues that get incumbent congressmen kicked out of         office.  Proposed benefit         cuts cost the Republicans a number of House seats in 1982 and their         Senate majority in 1986.  Efforts         to rein in Medicare spending doomed a lot of Republican congressmen in         1996 and helped turn that year’s presidential race into an easy         Clinton romp when many had initially thought the GOP would be         competitive even with a candidate like Bob Dole.
       
        This is also the kind of legislation that tends to pass only with         bipartisan support (think welfare reform) and can otherwise tank         spectacularly even if the president’s party controls both houses of         Congress (think Hillary’s health care plan).          Republicans are going to want cover from their Democratic         colleagues to mitigate the usefulness of the issue to their         general-election challengers.  The         House is going to want cover from the Senate before going along with         anything that could be construed as a benefit cut.          Senate Republicans are going to need to pull in at least five         Democrats and hold onto all their moderates to be able to beat a         filibuster.  If anything,         Congress is likely to err on the side of being too cautious.
       
        Which doesn’t necessarily mean the end result will be good.          The Medicare prescription-drug bill and NCLB are fine examples.          Both were deeply flawed proposals from the beginning, but at         least contained some reforms for which a case can be made.          In Congress, most of the free-market reforms suggested by the         White House were stripped out and the bills were loaded up with new         government spending.  They         both passed with bipartisan support and Bush, rather than objecting,         declared victory, held signing ceremonies and went home.
So, we could end up with the worst of both the Democrats and the Republicans in the bill. Or, we might get lucky and both parties in Congress and the President work together for the common good like in the (unfortunately, short-lived) tax simplification reforms of 1986.
 
 
 
 Posts
Posts
 
 
 
 
 
 
No comments:
Post a Comment