Call & Times

Republican­s shouldn’t be Democrats-lite

- By Amity Shlaes and Matthew Denhart

Republican­s seem to be toying with the notion that the best way to erase the taint left by the Jan. 6 Capitol riot would be to shift toward the political center and offer Democrat Lite. The Republican Party took a similar politics-driven approach to economics after an earlier scandal, Watergate. The shift to the center failed then and will fail again.

Sen. Mitt Romney of Utah has offered up a new Family Security Act that would supply child allowances of $4,200 per child each year to families, going down to $3,000 when the child turns six. Some of the particular­s are disconcert­ingly precise, bespeaking an obsession with social engineerin­g – why not age four, or age seven? – and the plan is so expensive that it envisions eliminatin­g other tax benefits, some of which may be important to families.

Other prominent Republican­s are also embracing ideas dear to Democrats. Romney and his Senate colleague from Arkansas, Tom Cotton, are cosponsors of a minimum-wage hike plan, to $10 per hour instead of the $15 preferred by congressio­nal Democrats and excluding undocument­ed immigrants. Missouri Sen. Josh Hawley would go all the way to $15 for employees of big companies.

Perhaps Romney and his colleagues think such proposals can reverse some of the damage to their party inflicted by the assault on the Capitol in January. The logic seems to be that offering up these Democrat-friendly ideas can help Republican­s capture the suburban and working-class center.

Economic merits aside – the record of family-benefit programs at improving jobs and pay is, to put it politely, subpar – history shows that this kind of post-scandal effort to hold the political center is unlikely to succeed.

After President Richard Nixon resigned in 1974 amid the Watergate scandal, his successor, Gerald Ford, had a choice.

Ford could continue Nixon’s economic policy: a politicall­y driven, interventi­onist mishmash that went as far as adopting wage-and-price controls. Under Nixon and his Democratic Treasury Secretary John Connally, inflation and unemployme­nt had moved dramatical­ly higher.

Or Ford could drop the interventi­on and make the case for traditiona­l Republican market-oriented policies, including lower taxes and tight monetary policy. There was even the possibilit­y that Democrats in Congress would go along. Such market-friendly pullback after all had been pursued by a Democrat, President John F. Kennedy, whose tax cuts, signed into law by President Lyndon Johnson, had helped sustain the prosperity of the mid-1960s.

Ford opted instead to pursue more economic mishmash, doubtless because he thought that only conciliati­on would sustain his challenged party and his presidency. He developed a vast and complex plan designed to cheer up and cheer on voters. Under the mistaken notion that inflation could be controlled by consumers, Ford mounted an absurd campaign, dubbed “Whip Inflation Now,” aimed at getting Americans to spend less. The new president debuted with a tax-increase proposal, then, when the increase proved unpopular, reversed, proposing tax cuts – but overly crafted cuts more oriented toward consumers (the most voters) than producers (smaller in the vote count).

The result of Ford’s chaotic equivocati­on was that the Misery Index, the sum of inflation and unemployme­nt, stayed stuck above 10% right through to 1976, the year Ford ran for election on his own. The 1976 Republican platform featured more centrist patter, acknowledg­ing that “the best tax reform is tax reduction,” but recommendi­ng only “structural tax adjustment­s” and Romney-esque tax credits for child care.

Ford’s hold-the-center plan didn’t work. The tactic opened fatal space to his right that his Democratic opponent, Jimmy Carter, was more than ready to claim. Before the presidenti­al debates, Carter studied up on the Misery Index, using it to pound Ford en route to victory in November.

It may be that Ford was seeking to avoid the fate of Sen. Barry Goldwater’s candidacy in 1964. Goldwater, the ultimate Cold Warrior, lost after a strongly conservati­ve campaign, pushing for strong defense and attacking the very basis of modern tax structure, progressiv­ity. But that does not mean Goldwater’s free-market notions did not come to be appreciate­d by American voters. After enduring the inflation and joblessnes­s that ensued, a chagrined electorate got wise and began to see the advantages of pro-growth fiscal and monetary policy. Voters began to take an interest in tax cuts and the case for tighter policy by the Federal Reserve. In 1980, America voted in Goldwater’s heir, Ronald Reagan.

The Ford fiasco shows that the correct move now is for politician­s, especially Republican­s, to embrace economic fundamenta­ls, which hold true whatever the political weather. Wouldbe leaders should also think hard before jettisonin­g market principles for politics. Otherwise, it may be their policy that guarantees a repeat of the purgatoria­l 1970s. That would be not just scandal, but tragedy.

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