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- <text id=90TT1303>
- <title>
- May 21, 1990: Ignore My Lips
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- May 21, 1990 John Sununu:Bush's Bad Cop
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 18
- COVER STORIES
- Ignore My Lips
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>And forget Sununu too, Bush tells Congress, as he calls a budget
- summit and hints that it may even talk about--shhh!--raising t---
- </p>
- <p>By George J. Church--Reported by Michael Duffy and Nancy
- Traver/Washington
- </p>
- <p> "The Congress will push me to raise taxes, and I'll say no,
- and they'll push, and I'll say no, and they'll push again, and
- I'll say to them, "Read my lips: no new taxes."
- </p>
- <p>-- George Bush, accepting his nomination at the 1988
- Republican Convention
- </p>
- <p> "Read my lips: I was lying."
- </p>
- <p>-- Update suggested by NBC-TV's David Letterman last week
- </p>
- <p> A comic overstatement, of course--but the President was
- suddenly playing mysteriously coy. After hundreds if not
- thousands of repetitions that made "read my lips" the most
- memorable line of the 1988 campaign, Bush last week practically
- invited Congress to start pushing, with a hint that his lips
- might now frame something other than a flat no. The President
- asked congressional leaders to join Administration officials
- in a "summit" meeting to plan, at long last, a real whack at
- the runaway budget deficit. His spokesman, Marlin Fitzwater,
- said Bush wanted the talks to start with "no preconditions" and
- proceed "unfettered with conclusions about positions taken in
- the past." Meaning, everyone assumed, that a tax increase could
- at least be seriously discussed, and Bush just might let
- himself be talked into one.
- </p>
- <p> Or was that what the President meant? Edward Rollins,
- co-chairman of the Republican Congressional Campaign Committee,
- estimated that a tax hike might cost the G.O.P. ten of its 176
- seats in the House; 19 of the 45 Republican Senators signed a
- letter begging Bush in effect to "say it ain't so, Mr.
- President." The White House and its allies almost did. After
- a meeting with Bush, Alan Simpson of Wyoming, the assistant
- Senate Republican leader, insisted that the President was not
- talking about income taxes, for heaven's sake. Maybe excise
- taxes, or energy taxes, or a kind of national sales tax, or
- something or other, but never income taxes. Bush's chief of
- staff, John Sununu, speaking as "a senior White House official"--a transparent disguise--then gave a novel definition of
- what "no preconditions" meant. The Democrats, he said, were
- free to propose a tax boost, but "it's our prerogative to say
- no. And I emphasize the no."
- </p>
- <p> Sununu, whose task was to keep the Republican right quiet
- until the summit concluded, apparently did his job with far
- greater zeal than Bush intended. Sununu's efforts almost
- torpedoed the summit before it started. Democrats immediately
- took them as confirmation of their darkest suspicions--that
- Bush is again trying to portray the Democrats as the high-tax
- party, by euchring them into proposing an increase that he
- could either virtuously reject or pretend had been rammed down
- his throat as the price for shrinking the deficit. "Now I wonder
- if this [summit invitation] is a good-faith effort or whether
- political traps are being set," said House Budget Committee
- chairman Leon Panetta.
- </p>
- <p> Fitzwater disavowed the comments by Sununu. Speaking before
- the chief of staff was officially identified as the source, he
- even called the tone of the remarks "crazy." Bush himself
- apologized to House Speaker Thomas Foley by telephone and
- reassured him that "no preconditions" meant...well, no
- preconditions. So the week ended with negotiations still
- scheduled to start Tuesday but no one willing to predict
- success. "It very well could be that the budget summit will
- putter into nothing," said New York Democratic Congressman
- Charles Schumer. Similar meetings in 1987 and last year yielded
- mostly a collection of one-shot gimmicks and minor moves that
- served less to slash the deficit than to put off the day when
- something real and painful would have to be done.
- </p>
- <p> On the other hand, Budget Director Richard Darman and, of
- all people, Sununu, in a less theatrical configuration, appear
- to have convinced Bush that the day of reckoning can no longer
- be postponed. To begin with, the economic projections that the
- Administration used when it drew up Bush's $1.2 trillion budget
- proposals last winter have turned out to be far too optimistic.
- (Democrats, who think the phrase "too clever by half" might
- have been invented to describe Darman, grumble that he should
- have known that when he made those projections.) Corporate
- profits have dropped, reducing the federal tax take. Interest
- rates have gone up, rather than down as predicted, raising the
- amount the Government must pay on its borrowings. And the
- rescue of ailing savings and loan associations is running up
- greater than expected expenses practically by the hour, an
- estimated $45 billion this year.
- </p>
- <p> To meet the Gramm-Rudman-Hollings Act requirement of a
- deficit no greater than $74 billion in fiscal 1991, which
- starts Oct. 1, it had been thought that a cut of $36 billion,
- in itself a tall order, would be needed. But Darman publicly
- recalculated last week that a reduction of $60 billion to $100
- billion was necessary (depending on whether S&L bailout costs
- were treated as part of the official budget). If the White
- House and Congress cannot agree on such a reduction,
- Gramm-Rudman would force an automatic cut in spending (called
- a sequester) of that magnitude, divided roughly half and half
- between military and civilian expenditures but exempting Social
- Security and many other entitlement programs.
- </p>
- <p> Darman and Sununu had earlier convinced Bush that the nation--and the Republicans--could not stand a sequester of $60
- billion or more. Says one official: "It would be so draconian
- that you would be closing VA hospitals, free [school] lunches,
- education assistance, food stamps, as well as a lot of the
- military. The Democrats would be all over us for shutting down
- the Government." Darman and Sununu also persuaded Bush that
- negotiations to avoid such a sequester had to start now. They
- could not wait until September, the traditional time, because
- that would be only two months before the congressional
- elections, and campaigns would be in full swing. As one official
- put it, "The political flak we've seen develop here in the
- past 24 hours would be ten times worse in September."
- </p>
- <p> A common assumption is that the summiteers will remove the
- cost of the S&L bailout from the budget. But there will be
- strong resistance to cutting the remaining $60 billion off the
- deficit. There is a legitimate concern that so huge a whack
- would put too great a strain on the economy, which, though it
- has so far avoided recession, is growing at a snail's pace,
- 2.1% in this year's first quarter.
- </p>
- <p> Whatever deficit reduction might be agreed on would probably
- be divided about equally between spending cuts and tax
- increases. But which taxes? The most obvious target is the
- least likely. The White House in practice has already revised
- the "read my lips" pledge to mean no new income taxes. Bush has
- gone along with increases in other levies, such as the Social
- Security payroll tax, and has actually proposed hikes in excise
- taxes and so-called user fees, a term to which the White House
- has given an extraordinarily broad definition. But all signs
- are that the President will hang tough against any increase in
- income taxes, lest he make a total mockery of his campaign
- rhetoric.
- </p>
- <p> Higher "sin" taxes on such goods as liquor and cigarettes
- are relatively uncontroversial but would raise only about $10
- billion next year, well short of what is needed. Energy taxes
- would pull in serious money, $20 billion next year with a $5
- per bbl. tax on imported and domestic oil, but in the past they
- have ignited sectional conflicts. Higher gasoline taxes would
- disproportionately hurt Westerners, some of whom virtually live
- in their cars, while an oil-import tax penalizes
- Northeasterners, who heat their homes largely with petroleum
- from overseas. There is much talk about sliding around these
- difficulties by imposing a single tax on all forms of energy
- production and consumption--oil, coal, hydroelectric, natural
- gas, domestic, imported, what-have-you. Besides treating
- sections of the country more or less equally, such a tax would
- promote conservation and possibly help the trade balance by
- discouraging imports. But there are also objections. Since it
- would have to be based on the BTU (British thermal unit)
- content of various fuels, it would be hideously complex to
- calculate and collect, and it would harm some American
- industries that remain competitive in world trade largely
- because of their access to fairly cheap energy.
- </p>
- <p> Even if sufficiently heavy tax increases can be agreed on,
- there remains the difficult task of slashing spending on the
- scale required. It might force some reductions in Social
- Security, which Democrats have resisted about as feverishly as
- Republicans have damned higher taxes. So it is not surprising
- that Washington and the financial community abound with cynics
- who think the summit will end with nothing more than a few
- minor tax boosts and spending cuts and another rewrite of
- Gramm-Rudman to stretch its deficit-reduction targets. Bruce
- Thompson, a former Assistant Treasury Secretary and now a
- Merrill Lynch vice president, predicts that "the Gramm-Rudman
- targets will be recalculated to get to a balanced budget in,
- say, the year 2000," not 1993, as required under current law.
- In any case, the nation will need some luck to escape paying
- a stiff price for its politicians' unconscionable delay in
- cutting deficits. If big tax increases and sharp spending cuts
- do not tip the economy into recession quickly, continuing high
- interest rates, almost inevitable if deficits remain huge,
- might do so eventually. The decline could come around 1992--when Bush is running for re-election.
- </p>
- <p>CUTTING MUSCLE...
- </p>
- <p> While many vital programs are starving for funds...
- </p>
- <p> Low-Income Housing. Since 1980 federal outlays for rent
- subsidies and home-building programs for the poor and elderly
- have dropped from $41 million to $10 million. Though record
- numbers of homeless people are living on the streets, only
- 80,000 new units will be built this year, in contrast to
- 187,000 a decade ago.
- </p>
- <p> Infant and Child Immunization. With an alarming outbreak of
- measles sweeping inner-city neighborhoods, a $10 million
- inoculation program ran out of money this month. Support for
- infant- and child-vaccination programs has been increased from
- $31 million in 1981 to $156 million. But there is not enough
- money to provide low-income youngsters with all the shots that
- they need.
- </p>
- <p> Refugee Assistance. While the number of political refugees
- from all countries is expected to swell from 50,000 to 125,000
- this year, funds set aside to resettle them in the U.S. have
- been slashed from the 1980 level of $517 million to $369
- million. The health and resettlement needs of new arrivals will
- be covered for only four months instead of for two years, as
- in the past.
- </p>
- <p>...AND PROTECTING FAT
- </p>
- <p> ...pork-barrel projects and dubious perks abound in the
- federal budget.
- </p>
- <p> Space Research. NASA has yet to clarify what it expects from
- $500 billion worth of manned missions to the moon and Mars. Nor
- has it satisfied critics that its $20 billion space station is
- necessary. Most objectives could be attained through less
- costly unmanned programs or by sharing the price of space
- exploration with other nations, including the Soviet Union.
- </p>
- <p> Tax Deductions for Second Homes. Though many couples are
- priced out of the housing market, the Government still allows
- deductions for mortgage-interest payments on vacation homes.
- Closing this loophole would raise $1.3 billion during the next
- five years.
- </p>
- <p> Home Porting. The Navy wants to station its warships at 13
- bases around the U.S. Though dispersing the ships makes them
- less vulnerable, it also boosts the economies in the districts
- of influential members of Congress. With the Soviet threat
- receding, the Administration has cut back to six bases.
- Eliminating these would save $852 million.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-