How to Shut Down the Government
By DICK MORRIS & EILEEN MCGANN
Published on
DickMorris.com on March 7, 2011
At some point, the Administration will run out of cuts that it can live
with and the Republican House will have to decide whether to shut down
the government by refusing to vote for ongoing Continuing Resolutions.
The decision will be easy: either shutdown or shut up! There is no
way the GOP can have any ongoing leverage if it refuses to close things
down once Obama says no to further budget cuts.
The question is: How can the Republicans shut down the government
without suffering the same defeat that Clinton inflicted on them in 1995
and 1996? The full answers are in our new book
Revolt!: How To Defeat Obama and Repeal His Socialist Programs - A
Patriot's Guide. But here's a partial summary:
A total
government shutdown is like a strike in a labor dispute. The idea
is to punish the public until it forces management (in this case the
Democrats) to give in. In any strike, the key to winning public sympathy
and support is to articulate clearly one's demands and to formulate them
so that they elicit a positive response.
The central problem confronting the Republicans is that they seek a
panoply of cuts ranging all across the federal budget.
Their desired $61 billion of reductions ($100 billion
annualized) go into practically every area of discretionary
spending. There is no way to describe them in a sound
bite.
And, when they cannot tell voters what the cuts are about, the
electorate always imagines the worst. People assume the
GOP is cutting Social Security, Medicare, food stamps,
unemployment benefits, Headstart, and every other popular
program. Republicans, helpless to describe what they are
really cutting (because the cuts are so pluralistic) can only be
defensive. Inevitably, the debate centers around numbers
($61 billion in cuts) rather than any substantive description of
the cuts themselves.
To avoid this pitfall, Republicans should not simply shut down
the government to achieve the multiple cuts in their proffered
package of $61 billion in reductions. They need to scrap
that agenda after the negotiations fail. Such a broad
based package of cuts is fine for negotiations, but it makes a
poor message when the actual shutdown comes.
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Instead,
Republicans must do the opposite: concentrate their cuts on two or three
vulnerable programs or agencies while leaving all the others totally
untouched. Such a strategy will let the Party explain its cuts and
phrase them in a broadly popular way.
For example, the federal government spends $40 billion a year on highway
construction. About one-quarter of that amount is for highway
repair and maintenance, necessary for safety. But the other
three-quarters ($30 billion a year) are for new highways. The
Republicans should zero fund new construction and say that America needs
a three year moratorium on new highway construction. Repair and
maintain what we have, but we will have to do without new federal roads
for the next year to save $30 billion. It's a tradeoff, they
should say, but we need deficit reduction more than we need the new
roads.
Other prominent candidates for zero funding are Obama's National
Infrastructure Innovation and Finance Fund a pork barrel construction
project ($4 billion a year) and his Build America Bonds which provide
for a federal subsidy to states and localities to pay the interest and
principal on their bonds for infrastructure ($11.5 billion a year).
Together, these three programs cost us $45.5 billion a year, close to
the GOP spending reduction goals. Nobody is going to bleed if they
are cut and most voters will accept the necessity of zero funding them
for at least a year and possibly for three years.
For additional political advantage, Republicans should zero fund the
Corporation for Public Broadcasting ($500 million a year) and the
National Endowments for the Arts and for the Humanities ($500 million a
year).
And, for political cover, the House should propose rolling back the
Congressional budget to 2008 levels saving $500 million a year).
Add in $4 billion cuts already agreed to and $6.5 just proposed by the
White House and you come to $57.5 billion, very close to the $61 billion
the GOP proposed.
Then the Republicans should leave all other federal agencies in tact
with no cuts. They should present the Democrats with bills for
continuing funding for the other agencies that are identical to those
which would have passed the Senate. Then, if the Democrats choose
to vote against the funding for these other agencies, it is they who
will have held the country hostage and closed down the government.
Republicans would be perfectly willing to keep all the other agencies
open.
And, by unilaterally zero funding the targeted agencies, Republicans
will, de facto, have accomplished their budget reduction goals and be
able easily to explain them to America. And who will care that
these agencies are zero funded?
The result will inevitably be a total victory for the Republican Party
and for those who want to cut the budget.
Then, Republicans should take the next step and roll back Medicaid
funding to 2008 levels and block grant it to the states. Read
Revolt! for details!
What Obama Can't Do, These SIX
Events Could - These six "jackpot" events are about to change your
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