Conservatism in the original sense of the word is characterized by caution and skepticism about new ideas and policies. This sort of conservatism is necessary at all levels of government, particularly local governments. These days, local governments tend to attract two kinds of people. The first have creative ideas that arenât always practical. The second are self-aggrandizing politicos who dream of big projects to secure their legacy.
Left unchecked, these people do silly and sometimes harmful things. In a small town I grew up in, the city had the brilliant idea of spending $250,000 painting all the downtown crosswalks red and green. The red and green looks ugly and faded last time I was in town and to the shock of the city council, downtown businesses havenât been saved. In Boise, conservative citizens have so far stood as a force against the grandiose scheme of our mayor to introduce a trolley as it would snarl Boise traffic.
Every city needs a conservative and hopefully two on its city council. I know a City Council has a shot of making good decisions when I see a couple cranky old people sitting behind their desks demanding audits, calling for impact studies, and constantly asking how weâre going to pay for all this. The cities where self-aggrandizing politicosâ legacy dreams were never challenged are those in the most trouble today.
Conservatismâs greatest strength can also be its greatest weakness. When things are good enough, leaving well enough alone is a good policy. When things are a mess, you need to find some way to straighten them out. You need a significant solution, and the natural skepticism of conservatives often makes this impossible.
Conservatives demand perfection in proposed solutions and protection against any abuse or problem in the future. It reminds me of Ron Popeil, the famous infomercial star. In one he did for the Showtime Rotisserie, Mr. Popeil boasted that the Rotisserie didnât require constant attention. You could, âSet it and forget it.â For many conservatives, thatâs the goal when it comes to major government reform. Â It should be a plan with no downsides that adheres strictly to conservative principles and leaves no door open through which bad policy can come.
For example, some conservatives oppose the passage of a Balanced Budget Amendment unless it also contains a tax limitation amendment. The fear is, without budget deficits, instead of cutting spending, politicians will raise taxes. So we canât stop out-of-control deficits without also being assured there would never be another tax increase. This is a poison pill that makes actual passage of the amendment impossible. People who agree we need a Balanced Budget Amendment may not agree that taxes should never be raised.
Tax Reform is another key issue. Many conservatives and libertarians complain about government violations of privacy, but many seem to overlook the fact, at this time of year, every citizen is required to disclose to the government every penny of income they earned in the previous year. The current tax code is a labyrinth of confusing laws that even the IRS isnât quite sure about, and it costs our economy $350 billion a year in compliance cost. In addition, the cost of our taxes are embedded in the products we sell, but other countries arenât, so it hurts American exports.
Yet conservatives canât agree on a plan to bring about major reform. In addition to âRon Popeilâ conservatives, many corporations and businessmen within the GOP donât want serious tax reform at all. Theyâve figured out how to game the system under the current law. Much of this is in the real estate industry. The Home Mortgage Interest Deduction allows taxpayers who itemize to deduct their home mortgage interest from their income. The vast majority of homeowners donât take advantage because they donât earn enough to save on their taxes by itemizing. However, for those who do itemize, it means they can buy a more expensive house than they could otherwise afford, much to the benefit of real estate brokers and the construction industry.
Beyond this, there are a host of ideas of how to fix the tax code: The Flat Tax, the FAIR Tax, or flatter taxes. A host of opponents within the conservative movement are ready to shoot down tax proposals Of the Flat Tax, columnist Mike Adams argues that a Flat Tax wouldnât be guaranteed to remain flat because over the years the tax code has been changed twice as often as the average citizen changes their underwear.
During the 2012 campaign, Herman Cain proposed a 9-9-9 tax reform that would depend on a 9% tax on corporate and personal income and a 9% sales tax. The plan was attacked because it might be 10-10-10 or 18-18-18 some day. Rick Santorumâs plan to give us a two-rate personal income tax and a lower corporate income tax with no corporate income tax for American manufacturing was attacked for helping our struggling manufacturing sector over all other sectors of the economy.
The FAIR Tax would replace all payroll taxes, capital gains taxes, gift taxes, estate taxes, and corporate income taxes with a single retail sales tax of 23% while providing a prebate to every American family equal to the tax that people would pay up to the poverty level in spending to ensure Americans are able to purchase the essentials of living. The tax would end the IRS, and the federal regulation through the tax code. Those Americans who sold items would have to collect the tax, but for the vast majority of citizens, the government would be out of their lives forever.  Pastors and community groups would not be hassled by the organization anymore.
Itâs nit picked by this group or that because this little special interest or that one will not do as well under the Fair Tax. One fear constantly expressed by its opponents is we could end up with an income tax and a sales tax. That could happen even without passage of the Fair Tax. Passing a Value Added Tax in addition to the Income Tax was on the table in the early days of the Clinton and Obama Administrations. So Fair Tax opponents will consider getting the IRS out of our financial lives only after 2/3 of Congress and 38 states vote to repeal the Sixteenth Amendment, which allows the income tax. Until then, citizens must continue surrendering their financial privacy to the government every year.
The prebate idea is opposed by many conservatives as well. I spoke to a state representative who feared itâd become an entitlement by sending people money when they hadnât paid taxes or might spend less than their prebate amount in purchasing living essentials. I pointed out we already do something similar with the Earned Income Tax Credit and asked how this things made things worse and he didnât have an answer. The problem wasnât that the Fair Tax was as bad or worse than what we have, itâs that it wasnât perfect. The search for perfection continues while our current tax code is a lead weight around the legs of our economy.
If tomorrow a bill passed into law implementing the Flat Tax, the Fair Tax, 9-9-9, or Mr. Santorumâs Flatter Tax, our economy would improve and we would see real growth. What it wouldnât be is perfect. Weâd have no assurances someone wouldnât change the tax law. Yes, the rates could go up. Yes, we could end up with an income tax and a sales tax. It wouldnât be a flawless victory guaranteed to be maintained for all time.
Raising taxes is a lot harder than many conservative tax reform opponents make out. Indeed, even with a Democratic Congress, President Obama avoided it, and he ran on a pledge not to raise taxes on individuals earning less than $250,000 per year. He broke this only with Obamacare and an increase in cigarette taxes. Reinstiuting the IRS would be required to collect income taxes after the passage of the Fair Tax. Bringing back the IRS a few years after the American people believed it safely dead would be a politically costly move. Still, no matter how unlikely, these worst case scenarios could happen.
Thatâs the problem for Ron Popeil conservatives. The basic working of politics doesnât set up eternal conservative victories. Eternal vigilance is still the price of liberty.
Conservatives of all stripes revere the Constitution, but the Constitution itself wasnât an achievement of perfection. Benjamin Franklin said at the conclusion of the Convention, âI confess that there are several parts of this constitution which I do not at present approve, but I am not sure that I will never approve of themâŠI agree to this Constitution with all its faults, if they are such because I believe a general government necessary for usâŠThe opinions I have had of its errors, I sacrifice to the public good.â
Conservatives must make a choice. If we want to be mere speed bumps on the road to national ruin, then we should stick with the Ron Popeil approach of demanding perfection and victory forever before weâll support reforms. If we want a shot at saving American liberty, then Iâd suggest Ben Franklin and his imperfect constitution would be a better role model than Mr. Popeil and his amazing rotisserie.