San Antonio Express-News

GOP likes to have Biden cake and eat it, too

- CATHERINE RAMPELL

Always remember the First Law of Fiscal Policy: “Wasteful” government spending is only the spending that goes to other people — not to me.

When Democrats passed their $1.9 trillion American Rescue Plan in the spring, it received zero GOP votes. At the time, Republican politician­s decried the stimulus package as “wasteful” and a “parade of leftwing pet projects” that was “bankruptin­g our children.” In the months since, however, Republican­s have been touting projects in their states and districts financed by that very same bill.

This unearned credit-hoarding began almost immediatel­y. Before the bill even hit President Joe jubiden’s desk, Sen. Roger Wicker, R-miss., trumpeted its benefits for restaurant owners (while omitting mention of his own “no” vote, naturally).

Similar boasts soon followed from Republican Reps. Madison Cawthorn (North Carolina), Elise Stefanik (New York), Troy Balderson (Ohio), Beth Van Duyne (Texas) and others.

Republican state officials who once derided the bill as irresponsi­ble, mistargete­d or unfair are also now eagerly hoovering up its money. Even so, some still claim to oppose it.

In her recent budget address, South Dakota Gov. Kristi L. Noem, a Republican, blamed Biden’s agenda for “horrifical­ly high inflation” and called the stimulus package a “giant handout.” She then indicated she was happy to stick her own hand out: Noem urged state lawmakers to spend South Dakota’s Covid-relief allotment on investment­s in water infrastruc­ture, public health, workforce developmen­t, child care and many other issues that … sound a lot like Democratic priorities.

Noem said she considered refusing the funds. But she changed her mind, she said, because the money might then go to “California, to New Jersey, maybe Illinois, Michigan or Minnesota.” That is: bluer states, where politician­s are presumably less capable fiscal stewards.

Over in Ohio, Republican Gov. Mike Dewine also initially opposed the American Rescue Plan; then he signed Gop-sponsored state legislatio­n appropriat­ing billions of the federal package’s funds toward Ohio’s unemployme­nt system, water and sewer management, pediatric behavioral health and other purposes.

In Texas, federal funds went to the unemployme­nt system, hospitals, the tourism industry and food banks. Some dollars have also been reserved for tax cuts, though there are ongoing legal challenges about whether the money can be used this way.

And in Arizona, Republican Gov. Doug Ducey recently used the federal windfall in part to expand high-speed broadband to underserve­d areas. As Arizona Republic columnist E.J. Montini observed at the time, Ducey publicly thanked Republican state lawmakers for this “historic investment” — even though the money had come courtesy of federal Democrats.

Arizona has also used American Rescue Plan money to undermine COVID precaution­s by offering special grants to schools that don’t implement mask or vaccine requiremen­ts. Pretty rich given pervasive GOP complaints about abuse of federal funds.

This “money for me but not for thee” approach is hardly unique to the American Rescue Plan. Consider a recent plea for disaster relief from Sen. Rand Paul, R-KY.

Paul has long opposed federal aid when other states requested it for victims of hurricanes, 9/11 or other mass tragedies. He told The Post’s Mike Debonis that his objections — including for aid for 9/11 — were driven by concerns about fiscal responsibi­lity, and that he simply wanted new spending to be paid for. But Paul has opposed such spending even when it was paid for, arguing that any identified fiscal offsets should be used to pay down the debt rather than assist disaster victims.

“Everybody wants something, and somebody says, ‘Oh, there’s money in the treasury! Guess what? There’s not. There’s a big hole. A big, black hole in the treasury, $28 trillion dollars’ worth,” Paul fumed when his Republican colleague Sen. John Neely Kennedy (La.) asked for hurricane relief in July.

After tornadoes devastated Kentucky this month, Paul changed his tune. He asked Biden to “expeditiou­sly” deploy federal assistance to his constituen­ts. (Biden agreed and sent federal aid.)

We have, of course, seen this First Law of Fiscal Policy play out before, particular­ly in debates about safety net programs.

Not only among Republican­s, by the way. Seemingly every American thinks they, and they alone, merit Uncle Sam’s beneficenc­e — unlike those shirkers from other states, political persuasion­s or background­s. (The Second Law of Fiscal Policy is a corollary: The only acceptable tax hike is a tax hike on someone else.)

None of this is to suggest that Democrats should make, say, universal pre-k available only in blue states. Nor that tornadorav­aged Kentuckian­s and hungry Texans and broadband-less Arizonans don’t deserve federal resources. (Though I have some qualms about using federal dollars to subsidize state tax cuts or to incentiviz­e anti-vaccine policies in schools.)

Constituen­ts are entitled to relief funds and public investment­s, even if the Republican­s they elect sometimes claim otherwise. But it might be helpful if voters, on occasion, noticed that Republican­s are having their cake and gorging on it, too: condemning unspecifie­d “Biden policies” as irresponsi­ble and inflationa­ry, while gobbling up credit for those same policies whenever they prove popular.

 ?? Jabin Botsford / Washington Post ?? Republican­s condemn President Joe Biden and Democrats for the American Rescue Plan, calling it irresponsi­ble and inflationa­ry, but now they are gobbling up funds for their constituen­ts.
Jabin Botsford / Washington Post Republican­s condemn President Joe Biden and Democrats for the American Rescue Plan, calling it irresponsi­ble and inflationa­ry, but now they are gobbling up funds for their constituen­ts.
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States