National Review
Online
Tuesday, August
10, 2021
We previously warned Republicans against supporting a smaller infrastructure deal with
Democrats, because it was always part and parcel of the broader effort to pass
a sweeping liberal agenda. Sure enough, after 18 Republicans voted to advance
the so-called infrastructure compromise over the weekend, Democrats responded
on Monday morning by unveiling a radical $3.5 trillion proposal meant to
transform the United States into a place more closely resembling a European
social-welfare state.
One of the characteristics that has
distinguished the U.S. has been the fact that a critical mass of Americans have
always believed that the government cannot or should not attempt to solve all
of its citizens’ problems. Of course, we are far removed from having a Congress
that narrowly follows its enumerated powers, or from an interpretation of the
Tenth Amendment that defers most questions to the states. But skepticism of
centralized power, in addition to the checks and balances inherent in our form
of government, has prevented the U.S. from going as far in intervening in
people’s lives as the governments of other Western nations do.
Democrats have always seen this reality as
a bug — not a feature — of our constitutional structure, and they have long
been frustrated by the fact that the U.S. has not emulated other countries with
as robust of a welfare system. While the Democrats’ current reconciliation
proposal would not turn the U.S. into Europe overnight, it would take a huge
leap in that direction.
What’s important to keep in mind about the
Democratic proposal, released by socialist Senate Budget Committee chairman Bernie Sanders,
is not merely that it spends an exorbitant sum of money, but that it creates
new programs that would permanently change the relationship between Americans
and their government from birth until death. And Democrats will be able to pass
it without a single Republican vote, bypassing the Senate filibuster, as long
as they can get around the Senate parliamentarian.
If Democrats get their wishes and pass the
entire bill, more children would end up in child care subsidized by the federal
government and progress into federally funded universal pre-K. The bill then
makes available tuition-free community college, and increased assistance toward
four-year college programs. And it also adds, further along life’s spectrum,
federally paid family and medical leave as well as more federally financed
public housing.
The bill would expand Obamacare’s
subsidies for purchasing health insurance and then create a new government-run
health-care program for low-income individuals living in states that chose not
to expand Medicaid. And for seniors, the plan promises to add a new dental,
vision, and hearing benefit to the unsustainable Medicare system as well as
more money for home and community-based care.
Beyond expanding the cradle-to-grave
welfare system, the resolution would also address other liberal priorities. It
would make a down payment on the Green New Deal by promising to create
“environmental justice and climate resilience.” It would aim to achieve this in
a variety of ways, including with wasteful clean-energy programs and a
“Civilian Climate Corps” that would enlist thousands of young Americans to work
on climate-change mitigation projects. Additionally, it would attempt to
stretch the procedural mechanism of reconciliation to expand immigration by
providing millions of green cards to illegal immigrants.
The bill, it should be noted, would come
on top of the $6 trillion that was spent in response to COVID-19 and in
addition to the half trillion dollars in new spending Democrats just advanced
with Republican assistance. Were the full agenda to get through, it would mean
that Washington would have enacted $10 trillion in new spending since the start
of the pandemic less than 18 months ago. This at a time when President Biden’s
own budget is projecting that debt as a
share of the economy will surpass World War II levels to reach the highest point in American history.
This brings us to one area of the European
system that Democrats are not so eager to highlight. And that reality is that
European countries that have vast welfare states impose much higher taxes on
middle-class workers, including in the form of regressive VAT taxes. Democrats
know that, were they to actually pay for their vision, it would hit
suburbanites who are now a core part of their coalition. So they are claiming
that they’ll be able to achieve their agenda just by asking the super wealthy
to pay a tad more. Though the proposal is vague on details, it promises to hike
taxes on corporations and “high-income individuals” (a cutoff that Biden has
previously defined as $400,000, while offering conflicting signals as to
whether that threshold refers to individuals or households). In order to give
themselves wiggle room, the reconciliation instructions allow for $1.75
trillion, or half of the new spending, to be financed through additional debt.
Given that Republicans just voted for a $550 billion bill that will
be nearly halfway deficit-financed, it’s hard to be surprised.
As a result of their slender majorities in
the Senate and House, they have no margin for error. The allegedly moderate
Democrats in both chambers have the power to stop this bill in its tracks, and
if they wish to be known as anything other than enablers of their party’s
radicalism, they should do so without compunction or apology.
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