The Rewards of Boldness

EDITORIAL The Rewards of Boldness President Bush has a word for a policy he thinks isn't big enough to fight for. The word is "small-ball." Bush prefers big ideas, the bolder the better. He...

...For example, Bush doesn't wind up negotiating with himself— that is, jettisoning important items from a proposal on the assumption Congress won't go along...
...What should be remembered is that racial preferences have a huge lobby in Washington...
...Then there was the Pershing missile episode in 1983...
...The United States had promised to deploy the missiles in Europe to checkmate a new generation of Soviet missiles aimed at NATO countries...
...Who remembers that...
...Though Bush isn't likely to be affected by all the noisemaking, others in his camp are...
...But then so was pulling out of the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty with Russia...
...Consider the reaction to Bush's new tax cut...
...The rest of Washington is...
...The Soviets retaliated by storming out of arms control talks in Geneva...
...And the impulse to weaken, to retreat amid criticism, to soften, to grow anxious over going too far, remains strong...
...Outside, it's another story...
...Or take Bush's firm stand against racial preferences, an issue he could have ducked or temporized on...
...When Bush delivers his State of the Union address on January 28, no doubt he'll ignite more frenzies of surprise and trepidation...
...The political community in Washington, including many congressional Republicans, is unnerved by fearless policy-making...
...President Reagan went through this, and proved that tenacity pays off...
...The analogy with Reagan is apt today...
...Of course they don't have the megaphone the race lobby does, so they aren't heard from now...
...At least eight Senate Republicans found serious fault with it...
...We've got a piece of advice for them: Don't panic...
...You'll only make things worse if you do...
...And once implemented, the full-blown policy or something close to it is more likely to produce what it's supposed to...
...Hang tough and good things will happen...
...Events have vindicated him on both counts...
...These reforms, too, are supposedly no-nos with harmful political repercussions...
...So instead of containment of Saddam Hussein and his weapons of mass destruction, a policy that would satisfy most of the world and perhaps most Americans, Bush is pursuing regime change in Iraq and has fashioned a new doctrine of preemption...
...The cycle is not a new one: The president announces a daring initiative, Washington recoils, and doom is predicted, but a steadfast president prevails and the weeks of anxiety and trembling are forgotten...
...The press is brimming with stories about average citizens who are tepid about the tax cut and complaints from economists who say it will drive up the deficit without boosting the economy...
...In 1981, his tax cut (three time bigger than Bush's in 2001) was called a budget-buster, an inflation-spiker, and a wild and reckless gamble...
...Again steadfastness worked, and Reagan gained politically as well...
...And a year ago he cited Iraq, Iran, and North Korea as an "axis of evil...
...He loathes halfway measures...
...George W. Bush is far closer to Reagan in ideology, boldness, and resolve than he is to his own father...
...Despite Soviet objections and throngs of peace marchers, Reagan went ahead...
...There, the opponents of affirmative action vastly outnumber the advocates...
...Sure enough, they did, and soon were signing an arms reduction treaty that Reagan had been advised to abandon because the Soviets wouldn't consider it...
...Not at all...
...We could go on...
...Anything more than a fleeting reference to creating individual investment accounts in Social Security will have the same effect...
...When a conservative president acts this way, the press piles on...
...Had Reagan blinked and settled for less, he'd probably have been a one-term president...
...Much of Washington was rattled, even White House aides and GOP leaders in Congress...
...There is a downside...
...Senate minority leader Tom Daschle labeled it "obscene...
...Steadfastness, in this case adherence to the principle that serious tax cuts promote a stronger economy, will be rewarded once more...
...In reality, Congress often approves policies it doesn't like simply because the president insists...
...appeals court judge and last week urged the Supreme Court to strike down racial preferences at the University of Michigan...
...The Washington political class is essentially a standpat group...
...Also, a president with big proposals looks presidential, not like a small-state governor...
...Then there was the decision to stop allowing the American Bar Association to interview and rate potential judicial nominees...
...More important, Bush declared a war on terrorism rather than merely prosecuting terrorists...
...Once it happened, it was accepted and forgotten...
...Democrats put up a stink...
...The blizzard of attacks was inevitable after the announcement of an unexpectedly sweeping proposal...
...But they will be in 2004...
...Just as certain was the media's focus on the "problem" Bush has with black voters and his need to mollify them...
...Polls are not particularly favorable...
...Reagan assured his queasy aides that no compromise was necessary and that the Soviets would return to the arms talks...
...The bold approach has many advantages...
...More than one Republican said Bush might have to abandon his plan to eliminate the double taxation of stock dividends...
...Another advantage is Bush improves his chances of getting what he wants and the country needs, not a half or a third of it...
...Liberal interest groups go on the warpath...
...But Reagan didn't flinch, his tax bill passed, and by 1984 the economy was booming with lower inflation, falling interest rates, and plummeting joblessness...
...And instead of accepting the conventional wisdom that Republicans must abjure conservative positions on race-related issues after the Trent Lott episode, the president renominated Charles Pickering as a U.S...
...But the storm will pass, and it will dawn on Washington that only two Republicans are likely to vote against Bush's bill and, with tweaking here and there, a number of Democrats will probably sign on...
...The lesson is clear: Boldness in pursuit of just causes and legitimate goals may cause heartburn, but it works...
...Surely his insistence that real reform and modernization of Medicare must accompany the creation of a prescription drug benefit will prompt hand-wringing...
...Rather than a modest economic growth package, he is seeking a supersized tax cut...
...Washington was in a tizzy, fearing the Cold War would turn hot...
...Bush has caught on to how the Washington cycle works, so he isn't the problem...
...So it must be time for Bush to pare his tax plan drastically in hopes of getting it passed, right...
...Fired Barnes, for the Editors...
...Nothing was more certain than the angry outburst by liberal Democrats and black leaders, who accused Bush and Republicans of turning back the clock on civil rights by siding with the white victims of a race-based admissions policy at the University of Michigan...

Vol. 8 • January 2003 • No. 19


 
Developed by
Kanda Sofware
  Kanda Software, Inc.