The Morning Call

An offering of a post-Roe family plan

- By Ramesh Ponnuru

Conservati­ves who want an economic policy that supports parents have long been a minority faction within the Republican Party.

In 2017, when Republican­s were in the process of passing a tax reform, Sens. Marco Rubio of Florida and Mike Lee of Utah proposed that the bill cut corporate tax rates a bit less and expand the tax credit for children a bit more. Donald Trump’s administra­tion came out against the move, and most Republican senators voted it down. (Most Democrats voted no, too, because they disliked the bill overall and wanted to make it as unattracti­ve to voters as possible.)

But the tide among Republican­s may be turning. Three senators — Mitt Romney of Utah, Richard Burr of North Carolina and Steve Daines of Montana — have just proposed a new child benefit. It would give parents $700 per month starting halfway through pregnancy, $350 per month for children ages 0 to 5 and $250 a month for children ages 6 to 17.

It’s a new version of a Romney proposal from last year, and one that is well-timed for the expected reversal of the federal right to abortion.

Like the previous version, the proposal would also reform the earned-income tax credit. That’s a subsidy to low-wage workers that encourages them to join and stay in the labor force. The proposal would change it in various ways.

Most notably, recipients would no longer receive a smaller benefit if they get married. The proposal calls for paying for these changes by eliminatin­g the tax deduction for state and local taxes. Many taxpayers who currently claim that itemized deduction would, however, either come out ahead or at least cut their losses because they have children, even if they live in high-tax states.

In addition to helping parents, the new benefit would cut child poverty rates. It would also reduce the longstandi­ng gap between the number of children that Americans say they want and the number they have.

This proposal is not going to become law soon. But there are four reasons to think it is going to get a better reception from Republican­s than similar ideas have in the past.

The first is that Romney and his staff addressed conservati­ves’ strongest objections to the previous version of the plan. Those critics worried that Romney’s proposal would reduce the incentive to work among low-income people.

The new plan requires that households make $10,000 in income to receive the full benefit. It also keeps the Temporary Assistance to Needy Families program, which includes a work requiremen­t, instead of getting rid of it as the old one did. The new plan is pro-work, pro-parent and pro-marriage.

Conservati­ves of a libertaria­n bent, who oppose government aid to parents even with no strings attached, will still object. But conservati­ves who don’t object to such aid in principle should come aboard.

Second, the Republican Party is changing. It sees itself as a working-class party more than a party of profession­als. The old orthodoxie­s of the party are up for grabs, including the notion that economic policy should aim first at liberating entreprene­urs and reducing the tax burden on high earners.

Third, social conservati­ves have decided to get involved in policy disputes beyond the old portfolio of abortion, same-sex marriage, school prayer and school choice. Fifteen years ago, I made the case for pro-family tax reform to a group of them. The audience was polite, even enthusiast­ic, but afterward the group’s leaders suggested they would stay in their accustomed lane. The Romney-Burr-Daines idea has the endorsemen­t of every social conservati­ve organizati­on.

That includes groups that work primarily to stop abortion, such as Susan B. Anthony Pro-Life America and the National Right to Life Committee. Which brings us to the fourth developmen­t: the impending demise of Roe v. Wade.

For years, supporters of legal abortion have accused opponents of favoring life only until birth, and then doing nothing to help mothers and children afterward. Now that legislator­s are going to have the power to set policy on abortion, what had been a debater’s point is becoming a real political and moral challenge.

The new bill is a partial response. Parents would be eligible for the benefit halfway through a pregnancy. And it’s no coincidenc­e that Daines is the head of the Senate Pro-Life Caucus.

Republican­s may be realizing that a practical anti-abortion agenda has to include policies that make raising children a viable propositio­n for more people, and to develop an agenda that also addresses the economic dimensions of family life.

 ?? ANNA MONEYMAKER/GETTY ?? Mitt Romney of Utah is one of three Republican senators spearheadi­ng a new child-benefit proposal.
ANNA MONEYMAKER/GETTY Mitt Romney of Utah is one of three Republican senators spearheadi­ng a new child-benefit proposal.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States