Lame Duck Session. Congress returns to
Washington the week of November 16th to complete work on the Fiscal
Year 2005 federal spending bills, raise the debt ceiling, and
(conservatives hope) resist the temptation so common during "lame
duck" sessions to engage in legislative mischief.
House and Senate leaders have assured their colleagues that their
return to Washington will be short and sweet, but Hill
conservatives nevertheless expect frustrated committee chairmen to
mount determined campaigns on behalf of stalled bills such as the
massive, pork-laden highway bill and the intelligence reform
legislation passed in response to the recommendations of the 9-11
Commission.
Insiders will be especially alert to attempts by the two outgoing
Appropriations Committee Chairmen, Alaska Sen. Ted Stevens
(R.-Alaska) and Florida Rep. Bill Young (R-Fla.) to pad the
spending bills with pork and other unnecessary items. Should this
happen, expect Hill leaders to push these confrontations into next
year by passing another "continuing resolution" to fund existing
programs for an additional two or three months.
Opportunities abound. Conservatives are downright giddy
about Tuesday's election results in the Senate. The election of
principled conservatives such as Tom Coburn (Okla.), Jim DeMint
(S.C.), David Vitter (La.), Richard Burr (N.C.), and John Thune
(S.D.) breathes new life into legislative efforts to, among other
things, reform our Social Security system, control federal
spending, pass the Federal Marriage Amendment, make the President's
tax cuts permanent, and overcome Democratic procedural hurdles that
have torpedoed the President's judicial nominations and tort-reform
legislation.
The itch. The President's re-election, moreover,
immediately transforms the upcoming 2006 mid-term elections (no, it
isn't too early to ponder the next round of elections!) into a
classic "six-year itch" election, where voters historically turn
out members of the President's own party during his sixth year in
office. To counter this, some Hill leaders take solace from the
overwhelming success of the President's somewhat counterintuitive
re-election strategy, where he chose to advance an aggressive and
principled policy agenda to excite the Republican/conservative
electoral base. After all, they reason, Bush won convincingly not
by tacking to the mushy middle, but by appealing to his
conservative base through his advocacy of robust initiatives such
as the Bush Doctrine, the Federal Marriage Amendment, and an
"Ownership Society."
Central to this analysis is the notion that the gridlocked 2000
elections represented, not a permanent 50-50 split between Red and
Blue America, but rather a transitory moment when the upward
trajectory of modern conservatism met an increasingly descendant
liberalism. Results from the two subsequent elections gives
experts, such as my Heritage Foundation colleague Matthew Spalding,
reason to believe that America is in truth a conservative nation
growing more conservative each election cycle.
What does this all mean? Conservative policies move most
expeditiously in Washington when the substance behind a good idea
aligns with the politics of the moment. When the 109th Congress
convenes in January, political self-preservation may grease the
skids for forward movement on big issues long regarded as too hot
to handle.
Case in point: Social Security reform. Campaign
professionals have long regarded proposals to allow young workers
to set aside a portion of their Social Security payroll taxes into
personal savings accounts as the political equivalent of touching
the "third rail." Tuesday's results should put that old notion to
rest. Every incoming Republican senator joined the President in
campaigning on behalf of personal Social Security accounts. Each
encountered stiff resistance from his Democratic opponent,
including efforts to turn it into a political liability. Yet, in
each and every case, the reform candidate won.
Skittish campaign consultants may be surprised to learn that the
next Senate will include more than 50 senators who have publicly
embraced this necessary reform idea. Should the President opt to
use some of his abundant political capital to advance this issue,
he will enjoy considerable support in the Senate.
Smaller government? The National Taxpayers Union circulated
an encouraging analysis of the Senate election, concluding that
"supporters of limited government and lower taxes got very good
news in the 2004 Senate elections." NTU assigns a grade to each
member of Congress on spending issues and found that outgoing
Democratic senators scored considerably lower than the six
Republicans with prior House service who will replace them. For
example, South Carolina Senator-Elect Jim DeMint earned a perfect
score in the latest NTU rating while the Democratic senator he
replaces, Ernest Hollings, received an "F." Similarly, defeated
Senate Minority Leader Tom Daschle and Democratic vice presidential
nominee John Edwards received NTU's lowest score and will be
replaced by senators who earned respectable scores of B- during
their last year in the House.
Mr. Franc, who has held a number of positions on Capitol Hill,
is vice president of Government Relations at The Heritage
Foundation.
First appeared in Human Events