Townhall
Finance...
The
Reagan
in Romney
by Larry
Kudlow
March 25, 2012
The late
William F. Buckley Jr. naturally put it best when he said, “The wisest
choice
would be the one who could win. No sense running Mona Lisa in a beauty
contest.
I’d be for the most right, viable candidate who could win.”
Bill
Buckley’s Law applies to Mitt Romney today. And it’s worth noting Rush
Limbaugh’s recent update to the dictum. Following Romney’s terrific
Illinois
victory speech on Tuesday, Rush said flatly, “A conservative
alternative to
Romney is Romney.”
As the
tough primary season ventures on, Romney has clarified and evolved his
views
into tough conservative positions.
On economic
policy, for example, he would limit the government budget to 20 percent
of GDP,
slash $500 billion in his first term, and restrain Medicaid, food
stamps, and
other entitlement transfers before block-granting them to the states.
His
Medicare reform is near identical to the Wyden-Ryan approach. He’s for
a true,
all-of-the-above energy policy that would take the regulatory handcuffs
off
drilling on federal lands. He would repeal Obamacare. And he has come
up with a
supply-side tax cut that lowers marginal rates by 20 percent
across-the-board
and drops the corporate tax to 25 percent.
These are
very conservative positions. One can seriously ask whether Romney isn’t
the
most conservative presidential candidate since Ronald Reagan.
Yes, there
is still work to be done on clarifying the difference between
Romneycare and
Obamacare, as well as the need for a strong King Dollar approach to
monetary
policy. And more tax simplification. But in broad terms it’s impossible
not to
think of this former businessman as conservative on the key economic
issues.
He’s for limited government, lower tax rates, and deregulation, all
with a fair
amount of detail.
Columnists
Dan Henninger and Jennifer Rubin have written about Romney’s close
relationship
with conservative icon Paul Ryan. It’s a point I made a while back, as
I
speculated a Ryan appointment as Romney’s budget director.
Senator Jim
DeMint, another conservative icon, recently told the National Journal
after
meeting with the former governor, “What I can tell conservatives from
my
perspective is that I’m not only comfortable with Romney, I’m excited
about the
possibility of him possibly becoming our nominee.”
The second
half of the week was dominated by Team Romney’s Etch A Sketch gaffe.
But folks
shouldn’t let this fog out Romney’s brilliant economic-freedom speech
at the
beginning of the week.
On the
night of his big Illinois victory, Romney offered a moral exposition of
the
merits of economic freedom and free-enterprise business. And all the
while, he
mockingly referred to Professor Obama, who has no clue about what makes
business tick.
Romney
railed against overregulation, noting that Obama’s regulators would
have shut
down the Wright brothers for their “dust pollution.” He said the Obama
government “would have banned Thomas Edison’s light bulb,” adding, “Oh.
That’s
right. They just did.”
Romney made
it clear that economic freedom is the key to the American economy. He
said,
“The history of the world has shown that economic freedom is the only
force
that has consistently lifted people out of poverty.” He added, “The
genius of
America is that we nurture these dreams and the dreamers. We honor
them, and,
yes, we reward them.”
Pause a
moment on the idea of rewarding the dreamers. This is a crucial
difference with
Obama, who wants to penalize the dreamers. Make a bunch of money and
you’re
gonna pay higher tax rates. It’s the class-warfare 1 percent versus the
99
percent. Tax the rich. Redistribute.
But Obama’s
class warfare is an assault on freedom. It’s an assault on life,
liberty, and
the pursuit of happiness. That’s a key point in this election. It may
be the
key point. And by acknowledging the importance of rewarding success,
and
constitutional freedom, Romney also shows he understands the incentive
model of
economic growth.
In fact,
Romney recently told National Review’s Robert Costa that solving the
budget
deficit can be done in two ways: spending reductions and pro-growth tax
policies.
The Ryan
budget itself, when properly priced out in dynamic terms to account for
growth
incentives from lower tax rates, would be balanced in ten years with
substantially lower debt-to-GDP ratios. It sounds like Romney gets
this. That
by itself is worthy of the nomination.
Then Romney
told us on Tuesday night, “This election will be about principle. Our
economic
freedom will be on the ballot.” He said essentially the same thing the
day
before during a University of Chicago speech. And for many months he
has been
talking about the battle for America’s soul, between Obama’s
big-government
entitlement state and his vision of a merit-based opportunity society.
This is
Reagan-like. This is Jack Kemp-like. This is Paul Ryan’s American idea.
This is, in
short, profoundly conservative. An election winner.
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