Monday, December 22, 2014

Is Allen West Disappearing Down A Right Wing Rabbit Hole In Dallas?

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Many Floridians were looking forward to inindicted war criminal and torturer Allen West running for Marco Rubio's Senate seat if Rubio decided to run for vice-president, something which has been looking increasingly far-fetched as Rubio descended into the realm of national joke with his childish, tantrum-like response to President Obama's decision to change the course of U.S.-Cuba relations. No one really thinks Rubio is running for anything-- except reelection. And West has decided to take a job as CEO of a Koch-sponsored right-wing fringe think tank, the infamous Dallas-based National Center for Policy Analysis. He did one last fundraising event for his PAC on Saturday in Pal Beach Gardens before taking his clown show off to Texas. He leave as a plagiarism scandal swirls around him-- perfect for a think tank-- and right after going on Sean Hannity's Fox hate segment to denounce former Florida Governor Jeb Bush, who he termed "a big government progressive Republican running against a bigger government progressive socialist Democrat."
"I think the challenge for Gov. Bush is going to be his policies on illegal immigration and also Common Core," West continued.

The GOP nominee, he said, will need to be able to communicate clearly and directly with voters in the party’s conservative base and explain how his or her views line up with theirs.

"I don’t think you’re going to be able to go out and win a presidential nomination without, I don’t want to say kowtowing to, but proving to conservatives that limited government, fiscal responsibility, individual sovereignty, our free market and free enterprise system, and also our strong national defense" are important to protect, he said. "Those are five key points that any Republican nominee is going to have to stress."
West helped elevate Debbie Wasserman Schultz to undeserved national prominence by pointing out that she's "the most vile, unprofessional and despicable" member of the House and a "coward," and by telling her to "shut the fuck up," insisting she had "proven repeatedly that you are not a Lady." He's the Republicans' public idea of an intellectual although behind the scenes many sneered at him as a trained minstrel show performer for their entertainment.

So he's packing up his family and moving west in search of greener redder pastures. The National Center for Policy Analysis is just the kind of outfit you would expect to hire someone of Allen West's calibre as their CEO. Established in 1983, by a right-wing British turtle farmer, Antony Fisher, its top policy objectives are cutting taxes for the rich, denying climate science, and, most important, privatizing Social Security and Medicare (as well as education, the EPA and criminal justice) and eliminating the estate tax for multimillionaires and billionaires. Along side the rich British turtle farmer, now dead, other founders included wealthy right-wing crackpots Russell Perry (CEO of Republic Financial Services), Wayne Calloway (CEO of Frito-Lay), John F. Stephens (CEO of Employers Insurance of Texas), and Jere W. Thompson (CEO of the Southland Corporation). The group claims to have written the basis of Gingrich's Contract With America. Although wealthy Republicans have contributed hundreds of thousands of dollars on an individual basis, most of the operation's budget comes from the insurance industry and just seven far right anti-democracy family foundations: Koch, of course, as well as Scaife, Olin, Earhart, Bradley, Castle Rock and JM.

About a decade ago these kooks made the national stage when one of their spokesmodels, Bruce Bartlett, turned on his former employer, George W. Bush, and wrote a book, The Impostor: How George W. Bush Bankrupted America and Betrayed the Reagan Legacy. The National Center for Policy Analysis, scared of offending right-wing mega-donors, immediately fired Bartlett. Something tells me if Bartlett couldn't keep a job at this organization, Allen will soon be running for office again, somewhere in Texas this time. And... for your edification, some excerpts from Chapter One of the book that so offended the National Center for Policy Analysis big-wigs. While you read Barlett's critique of George W. Bush, keep West's critique of Jeb in the back of your mind.
I Know Conservatives, and George W. Bush Is No Conservative

George W. Bush is widely considered to be one of the most politically conservative presidents in history. His invasion of Iraq, his huge tax cuts, and his intervention in the Terri Schiavo case are among the issues where those on the left view him as being to the right of Attila the Hun. But those on the right have a different perspective-- mostly discussed among themselves or in forums that fly below the major media's radar. They know that Bush has never really been one of them the way Ronald Reagan was. Bush is more like Richard Nixon-- a man who used the right to pursue his agenda, but was never really part of it. In short, he is an impostor, a pretend conservative.

I write as a Reaganite, by which I mean someone who believes in the historical conservative philosophy of small government, federalism, free trade, and the Constitution as originally understood by the Founding Fathers. On that basis, Bush clearly is not a Reaganite or "small c" conservative. Philosophically, he has more in common with liberals, who see no limits to state power as long as it is used to advance what they think is right. In the same way, Bush has used government to pursue a "conservative" agenda as he sees it. But that is something that runs totally contrary to the restraints and limits to power inherent in the very nature of traditional conservatism. It is inconceivable to traditional conservatives that there could ever be such a thing as "big government conservatism," a term often used to describe Bush's philosophy.

...Traditional conservatives view the federal government as being untrustworthy and undependable. They utilize it only for those necessary functions like national defense that by their nature cannot be provided at the state and local level or privately. The idea that government could ever be used actively to promote their goals in some positive sense is a contradiction in terms to them. It smacks too much of saying that the ends justify the means, which conservatives have condemned since at least the French Revolution.

George W. Bush, by contrast, often looks first to government to solve societal problems without even considering other options. Said Bush in 2003, "We have a responsibility that when somebody hurts, government has got to move." A more succinct description of liberalism would be hard to find.

...George W. Bush brags about never even reading a daily newspaper. Having worked in the White House, I know how cloistered the environment can be and how limited its information resources are-- much of what White House staffers know about what is going on in the White House actually comes from reporters and news reports rather than inside knowledge, which is frequently much less than reporters imagine. It's distressing to contemplate the possibility that the president's opinion about the worthlessness of outside information sources is widely held within the White House. Unfortunately, I know from experience that the president sets the tone and style for everyone in the White House, suggesting that it is more likely than not that this view does indeed permeate the West Wing-- a suspicion confirmed by the memoirs of those who have worked in this White House.

Reagan, on the other hand, had a conservative distrust of his own ability to know all the facts and arguments before making important decisions. That is one reason why he was so tolerant of leaks from the White House during his administration. Reagan knew that this was an important safety valve that allowed dissenting viewpoints to reach him without being blocked by those with their own agendas. Deputy Chief of Staff Dick Darman, who controlled the paper flow in and out of the Oval Office, for example, was often accused of preventing Reagan from seeing memos that argued against positions Darman favored.

...Traditional conservatives had grave doubts about George W. Bush since day one. First, he was his father's son. George H. W. Bush ran as Reagan's heir, but did not govern like him. Indeed, the elder Bush signaled that there would be a sharp break with Reagan-style conservatism in his inaugural address, when he spoke of being "kinder" and "gentler." Conservatives immediately asked themselves, "Kinder and gentler than whom?" To them, the answer was obvious: Ronald Reagan. In effect, Bush was accusing his predecessor and the philosophy he stood for as being the opposite of kind and gentle-- nasty and brutish, perhaps. As columnist George Will later put it, Bush was determined "to distinguish himself from Reagan by disparaging Reagan."

George H. W. Bush's break with Reagan quickly became apparent in other ways as well. For instance, he fired virtually every Reagan political appointee in the federal government just as thoroughly as if he had been a Democrat. Of course, the Reagan appointees all knew that they were liable to be replaced at some point, but the suddenness and thoroughness of the purge caught them all by surprise-- there had been no forewarning before Inauguration Day. It created a lot of ill will that came back to haunt the elder Bush when he got into political trouble later on. Most of the Reagan people sat on their hands rather than come to his aid.

I was spared the purge only because Reagan had appointed Treasury Secretary Nicholas Brady in the last days of his administration, knowing that he was a close friend of then–Vice President Bush. Since Brady stayed on, that spared Treasury the "transition" that other departments underwent and thus avoided a purge. Within a year or so, most of the senior political appointees moved on anyway and Bush had his chance to appoint their successors. The same thing would have happened in all the other departments, too, thereby saving Bush a lot of unnecessary antagonism from the Reagan crowd. It would have helped Bush govern as well, since many of the purged positions remained vacant for some time for various reasons and were often filled with less competent and experienced replacements. Moreover, many of the so-called Bush people turned out to have no meaningful connection to him and were nothing more than friends of friends, serving in government just to get a line on their résumés and not because they had anything to accomplish in terms of policy.

One of the first things I noticed when the new crowd came in in 1989 was that they would very seldom mention Ronald Reagan's name. When necessary, they always referred to the "previous administration." And it was quite clear that they viewed Reagan's "hard-line" conservatism as passé and counterproductive to governing. They, on the other hand, thought themselves to be much more politically astute and believed that they would be far more effective by jettisoning Reagan's ideological baggage.

The problem was that having abandoned Reagan's principles, they had nothing to replace them with except political expediency. This culminated in the infamous abandonment of the no-new-taxes pledge in 1990. The Bush people thought they were being so clever by simply posting a notice in the White House pressroom on June 26, 1990, which said that budget negotiations with congressional Democrats would take place and include discussion of "tax revenue increases." They seem to have thought that no one would notice this fundamental reversal of Bush's position on taxes. Needless to say, it was noticed instantaneously, causing an almost immediate decline in Bush's poll ratings.

I was told by one of the key participants in this decision that they never intended it as a repudiation of the pledge, but merely as an acknowledgment that in a growing economy taxes automatically rise. If this is true, it certainly is not evidence of political sophistication, but rather its opposite. Being the only Reaganite left in the Treasury Department, apparently I was the only one who knew how negatively Bush's concession would be perceived by the Republican rank and file. Unfortunately, no one asked my opinion before the decision was made.

I bring all this up because when George W. Bush first came on the radar screen as a potential presidential candidate, all that most conservatives knew about him was that he was the son of a president who had abandoned a successful conservative governing philosophy in favor of what they saw as squishy moderation, and was appropriately punished by voters for his sins. So when the younger Bush started talking about "compassionate conservatism," therefore, traditional conservatives immediately were suspicious of another Bush betrayal. As Richard Miniter wrote in the conservative Manchester Union Leader, "Bush's 'compassionate conservatism' strikes some as insulting and signals a return to his father's 'kinder and gentler' conservatism, which led to tax hikes and the loss of the White House."

As National Review's Andrew Stuttaford later put it, compassionate conservatism is an idea that should have been "strangled in the cradle." To even call it an idea is "flattery," he said. For the most part, it is little more than "pork wrapped up in schmaltz."

Right from the beginning, George W. Bush made it clear that he was not a conservative in the Reagan mold. In a speech in Indianapolis on July 22, 1999, he called the idea that our problems would be better solved if government would just get out of the way a "destructive mind-set." Government is "wasteful and grasping," Bush said, but "we must correct it, not disdain it." Commenting on this speech, Cato Institute president Ed Crane said it could have come straight out of the Progressive Policy Institute, a think tank allied with the Democratic Party.

Even in front of explicitly conservative audiences, Bush continued his theme that government was not the enemy, but just wasn't being used for the proper ends. In a speech to the Manhattan Institute on October 5, 1999, Bush put it this way: "Too often, my party has confused the need for limited government with disdain for government itself." He went on to complain that the government was too weak to do what was needed. It was "grasping" and "impotent," he said.

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1 Comments:

At 12:18 PM, Anonymous Bil said...

Thanks Howie, you DO know how to turn an oxymoron phrase.

"a Koch-sponsored right-wing fringe think tank"

Still looking forward to Noah's "former Prezidential candidate, yikes, Michele Bachmann" 2014 year end review. I say she's moving to Switzerland asap.

It's a good day for America.

 

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