Will the Stupid Party Agree to Higher Taxes and More Wasteful Spending?


I’m baffled by stupid Republicans (sorry to be redundant). Some GOPers have agreed to put taxes on the table. Not surprisingly, Democrats are praising them for this preemptive surrender, patting these Republicans on the head for being good little lapdogs. The Democrats are also high-fiving each other since they openly admit that tricking Republicans into a tax hike has been their top political goal, but that’s an issue for another day.

And what are Republicans getting in exchange for violating their no-tax promises? As you might suspect, they’re getting nothing. For all intents and purposes, the left is saying “that’s a good start” and waiting for GOPers to make further concessions. Needless to say, this is very irritating. And I’m not the only person who is upset. Here is a column that I co-authored along with Grover Norquist, Mike Needham, Phil Kerpen, Al Cardenas, and Duane Parde. We explain why higher taxes are a bad idea:

Some are now suggesting that instead of addressing the real problems our nation faces — by reducing government spending — the supercommittee should recommend tax increases to meet its deficit reduction targets. Tax increases are what politicians always do when they are not willing to govern—that is, to cut and reform government spending. The problem, of course, is that tax hikes crowd out and displace spending reform. …Advocates of…raising taxes…have put forward several unserious arguments. First, they say, “let’s compromise.” Let’s be balanced, they insist, and promise to cut some spending and raise some taxes. Having pushed spending way up, they now want to pretend this spending is normal or, at least, inevitable. It isn’t. …Why should anyone be asked to pay more taxes just so Washington can continue to overspend? …What’s more, there are good reasons to be wary – we’ve been down this road before. In 1982, President Ronald Reagan was promised three dollars of spending cuts for every dollar of tax hikes. The tax hikes were real. But spending — in real dollar terms — went up, not down. In 1990, the same trick was played out — this time at the expense of President George H.W. Bush and the American people. A two-to-one promise brought higher taxes and higher spending. When tax hikes are on the table, the talk about spending cuts evaporates. Oddly enough, the tax hikes remain. The second argument is: “We won’t raise tax rates – we will just reduce deductions and credits.” Nonsense. Closing tax loopholes is all well and good. But doing so to raise revenues is just as much a tax hike as raising tax rates. The tax hike crowd is trying to confuse tax hikes with tax reform. In fact, closing tax loopholes to raise revenue is ultimately antithetical to tax reform — there would then be less revenue available to use to cut tax rates.

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  • JCW

    Actually the stupid party will help the rich not pay their share and keep jobs away from millions… How much in unbacked dollars did Bush print? Republicans are not the friends of the common people… Rather than listen to what they say… watch what they do after they speak….

  • STEVEN HIGGINS

    Time for flat tax no deductions, all pay the same %. freeze spending till we are able to find out where $ goes ALL $ then get normal REAL Americans on the panel on cuts not government employies. Start with congress and house incomes and retirements and pay.

  • ORB

    As a Republican all my life I agree that it can rightly be called the "Stupid" Party.

    My personal opinion is that corporations pay no real taxes but the tax they supposedly pay is passed on to the consumer in the price of product. That being said it is time that the tax code be revised to eliminate corporate welfare and subsidies. And that is a fact!

  • Ann Wilson Kingsley

    The GOP believes that hiding tax hikes or anything else offensive under a president who is a Democrat gets them off the hook. Some say the devil made them do it. Republicans say Obama made me do it – or Clinton or… Unfortunately because of modern communication this ruse does not work so well. Newt Gingrich as Speaker of the House under Clinton passed the Expanded CRA, the laws that destroyed our banking system with bad mortgages. Everyone in the Republican Party needs to ask Newt if he is planning to revoke CRA when he is voted president. Newt is supposed to be brilliant, but from both his past and his recent activities, I would say he is the Republican Obama – a good orator, but not a good leader.

    Republicans need to stop using the Democrats as an excuse for bad legislation when they have the option to vote against it. WE THE PEOPLE know what you are doing.