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- <text id=89TT2793>
- <title>
- Oct. 23, 1989: The Can't Do Government
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Oct. 23, 1989 Is Government Dead?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 28
- COVER STORIES: The Can't Do Government
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Paralyzed by special interests and shortsightedness, Washington
- no longer seems capable of responding to its growing challenges
- </p>
- <p>By Stanley W. Cloud
- </p>
- <p> "Government isn't the solution; it's the problem." As a
- candidate and a President, Ronald Reagan loved that line. But
- Reagan seemed simply to be indulging in harmless hyperbole or
- offering his version of the time-honored aphorism that government
- is best when it governs least. Surely he did not seriously propose
- to dismantle an institution that had brought the U.S. through two
- world wars, restored stability during the Depression and played a
- major part in developing one of the highest standards of living on
- earth.
- </p>
- <p> Or did he? If Washington was "the problem" when Reagan took
- office in 1981, it looks like a costly irrelevancy today. After
- almost nine years of the Reagan Revolution, Americans may wonder
- whether the Government -- from Congress to the White House, from
- the State Department to the Office of Management and Budget -- can
- govern at all anymore.
- </p>
- <p> Abroad and at home, challenges are going unmet. Under the
- shadow of a massive federal deficit that neither political party
- is willing to confront, a kind of neurosis of accepted limits has
- taken hold from one end of Pennsylvania Avenue to the other.
- Whatever the situation -- the unprecedented opportunity to promote
- democracy in Eastern Europe, the spreading plague of drugs, the
- plight of the underclass, the urgent need for educational reform
- -- the typical response from Washington consists of encouraging
- words and token funds. Yet voters, especially the better-organized
- ones, continue to demand -- and often receive -- more benefits and
- services while rejecting higher taxes.
- </p>
- <p> Even some Republicans are expressing concern about the
- paralysis. Conservative analyst Kevin Phillips described the
- problem two weeks ago in the Washington Post as "a frightening
- inability to define and debate America's emerging problems." Last
- week's 190-point stock market tumble was the immediate result of
- economic developments, namely UAL's failure to obtain financing for
- its leveraged buyout. But Washington's glaring inability to control
- spending hardly inspires the confidence that markets need.
- </p>
- <p> Ironically, the best depiction to date of the nation's gridlock
- may have come last summer from a ranking member of the Bush
- Administration: Budget Director Richard Darman. In a speech at the
- National Press Club, Darman blasted both the Government and the
- voters for mimicking spoiled children with demands of "now-nowism
- -- our collective shortsightedness, our obsession with the here and
- now, our reluctance adequately to address the future . . . Many
- think of (the deficit) as a cause of our problems. But it is also
- a symptom, a kind of silent now-now scream."
- </p>
- <p> Darman's observation -- oddly reminiscent of Jimmy Carter's
- much maligned 1979 "malaise" speech on the nation's shrinking
- horizons -- was acute. But even as he was speaking, Darman and
- others in Government were obscuring the size of the federal deficit
- through slick bookkeeping and legislative tricks and promising bold
- new programs that they knew the federal budget could not sustain.
- </p>
- <p> Such hypocrisy is becoming more and more common in the
- Administration and Congress as the contradictions, limitations,
- frustrations and injustices they have created become increasingly
- apparent. Three key indicators of the degree to which Government
- has lost its bearings were evident last week:
- </p>
- <p> -- Budgetary Madness
- </p>
- <p> As the 1990 budget is being crammed into a single 1,376-page
- package, the White House and Darman's Office of Management and
- Budget have joined Congress in a staggeringly cynical conspiracy
- to mask the actual size of the deficit. OMB says it will be $110
- billion in the next fiscal year, within the Gramm-Rudman-Hollings
- target zone. But nobody really believes that. At the same time,
- several long-term, big-ticket items have been taken "off budget,"
- including at least $30 billion of the $50 billion for bankrupt
- savings and loans over the next three years. Because
- Gramm-Rudman-Hollings contains no penalty if estimates of past
- deficits are wrong, the Pentagon has shifted $2.9 billion from the
- deficit for fiscal year 1990, which began Oct. 1, to the previous
- year, simply by moving a payday back two days.
- </p>
- <p> The Administration has proposed almost no specific budget cuts
- this year, leaving Congress to find whatever savings it can. The
- Senate late last week passed a budget-reconciliation bill, but
- hours of negotiations with the House remain before final approval.
- If the bill does not reach the President early this week, for the
- first time ever the Gramm-Rudman-Hollings buzz saw will swing into
- action, requiring across-the-board spending cuts -- in Medicare,
- education, law enforcement, defense. Congress can vote to restore
- the money once the deadline is past. Dan Rostenkowski, chairman of
- the House Ways and Means Committee, wrote in the New York Times
- last week that Congress should let Gramm-Rudman-Hollings take
- effect to force a crisis: "Our refusal to attack the deficit would
- be comic if it were not so irresponsible."
- </p>
- <p> Yet many senior Bush advisers argue that the deficit is no
- longer a major concern because it is declining as a percentage of
- the gross national product. But that is true only by virtue of
- bookkeeping magic. The Congressional Budget Office puts the real
- fiscal-1990 deficit at $206 billion and says it is increasing
- relative to the GNP, thereby exerting upward pressure on real
- interest rates. Even so, says a White House official, "hardly
- anybody in the White House, or in the financial world, or elsewhere
- in the real world, believes that the budget deficit matters."
- </p>
- <p> -- Special-Interest Politics
- </p>
- <p> Congress last week seemed to be moving toward approval of the
- Administration's plan to cut the tax on capital gains to 15% as
- well as repeal or drastically curtail the catastrophic-health-care
- program for the elderly that was passed only last year with the
- wholehearted approval of the Reagan White House.
- </p>
- <p> The capital-gains cut, which would fulfill one of Bush's few
- specific 1988 campaign promises, is aimed at the well-to-do
- executives and wealthy investors in the Republican electoral
- coalition. The Democratic leadership on Capitol Hill mounted a
- confused, last-minute campaign to stymie the cut as unfair to
- working people. But the leaders' hearts, let alone those of
- rank-and-file members, did not seem to be in the fight. A two-year
- cut easily passed the House, while a bipartisan group of Senate
- leaders negotiated ways to make the reduction permanent.
- </p>
- <p> Although the White House argues that lowering the capital-gains
- rate would spur economic growth, many economists predict that it
- would add billions to the deficit over the long term. That was the
- least of considerations, however, in the White House and Congress.
- Says Speaker of the House Tom Foley: "I see little or no evidence
- that the Administration is pursuing serious deficit reduction."
- </p>
- <p> The catastrophic-health-care program, which lobbying groups for
- the elderly hailed at its passage, imposed an annual surtax of up
- to $800 on well-heeled Medicare beneficiaries, who balked at having
- to pay for benefits that were often duplicated by their private
- insurance. Last summer they began an intense, well-organized
- campaign for repeal, even though it could mean eliminating the
- entire program and leaving millions of needy seniors uncovered. The
- House voted overwhelmingly to do just that on Oct. 4, but the
- Senate, while inclined to eliminate the surtax, is trying to keep
- some parts of the program.
- </p>
- <p> -- Government by Symbolism
- </p>
- <p> Reagan was a master at this, and Bush has proved a very quick
- study. When the Supreme Court last July ruled that the burning of
- the U.S. flag qualified as protected free speech under the First
- Amendment, Bush and his advisers organized a media event before the
- Iwo Jima memorial in Washington so the President could call for a
- constitutional amendment to ban flag desecration. Congress shied
- away from an amendment, but last week it passed a simple criminal
- law that would impose a jail term of up to one year on anyone who
- burned the flag. The White House indicated that Bush would let the
- law go on the books without his signature, because he thought it
- was probably unconstitutional.
- </p>
- <p> Such high jinks are symptomatic of much broader problems that
- have both caused and accelerated the emasculation of Government.
- Washington has been at a political impasse since Reagan's first
- term, when Congress -- Republicans as well as Democrats -- refused
- to let him gut popular domestic programs to pay for his huge tax
- cuts. Instead, the Government decided to have it both ways: tax
- reduction as well as big boosts in defense spending and increasing
- middle-class entitlements (notably Social Security and farm
- supports), offset to a small degree by cuts in programs for the
- poor. The resulting deficit spending has spurred economic growth,
- but not sufficiently to cover the gap.
- </p>
- <p> Acknowledging as much, the Democrats have repeatedly ducked or
- skirted major issues and problems and have been all but powerless
- to offer effective opposition to the Republican program. Part of
- their difficulty stems from the weakness, egotism, venality and
- sheer political cowardice rampant on Capitol Hill today. Much of
- the current session, in fact, has been devoted to investigating
- either former members of Congress like John Tower, Bush's first
- choice as Defense Secretary, or prominent members such as Speaker
- Jim Wright, who was forced to resign because of his ethical lapses.
- </p>
- <p> Discipline is not what Congress is best at. It prefers being
- a dispenser of largesse to being a moral policeman or stern
- taskmaster. Leadership is generally left to the President. Yet
- George Bush seems to have as much trouble as ever with "the vision
- thing." Handcuffed by his simplistic "read my lips" campaign
- rhetoric against a tax increase as well as by his cautious
- personality, Bush too often appears self-satisfied and reactive.
- </p>
- <p> His long-term goals, beyond hoping for a "kinder, gentler"
- nation, have been lost in a miasma of public relations stunts. The
- President's recent "education summit" with the nation's Governors
- produced some interesting ideas about national standards but little
- about how to pay the costs of helping public schools meet them. His
- much trumpeted war against drugs was more an underfinanced
- skirmish. Bush told voters last year that he is an
- environmentalist, but the most significant clean-air proposals put
- forth this year -- stringent new standards on automobile emissions
- -- were adapted from California's strict limits for the 1990s.
- </p>
- <p> Abroad, Bush tends to turn Teddy Roosevelt's famous dictum on
- its head by speaking loudly and carrying a small stick. He did
- offer important new proposals on conventional-force reductions in
- Europe. Otherwise, he has allowed the Kremlin to trump him with a
- variety of strategic-arms offers, while he nonchalantly dusted off
- Dwight Eisenhower's "Open Skies" plan (to allow each superpower
- overflight inspections of the other's territory) and suggested a
- reduction in chemical weapons that Congress had long since ordered
- him to make. His offer of economic assistance to Poland and
- Hungary, as they attempt to loosen the shackles of the Communist
- economic system, seemed to be just another example of big talk and
- small deeds -- an impression offset only slightly when Congress
- pressured him to increase a proposed grant to Poland from a measly
- $115 million to a ho-hum $315 million.
- </p>
- <p> In its day-to-day conduct of affairs, meanwhile, the Federal
- Government is suffering from malnutrition. The Administration still
- has not nominated anyone for 77 senior Cabinet department
- positions. The Departments of Interior, Education, Labor and Health
- and Human Services have become nearly invisible.The Federal
- Aviation Administration's staff is still well below the level that
- existed before Reagan fired striking air controllers in 1981 and
- is using outmoded equipment to track near gridlock in the skies.
- </p>
- <p> Long-standing neglect at the Energy Department led to the
- dangerous deterioration of Government-run nuclear-weapons plants,
- and the department is currently dragging its heels on an estimated
- $150 billion effort to get the program back into shape. At the
- Department of Housing and Urban Development, new Secretary Jack
- Kemp is busy mopping up after eight years of Reagan-era
- mismanagement and scandal. The losses are running beyond $4
- billion.
- </p>
- <p> Many in the Administration believe they are in office to shrink
- Government. "You liberal writers are just like the Democrats in
- Congress," White House Press Secretary Marlin Fitzwater recently
- lectured a reporter. "You think Government isn't doing anything
- unless it's taxing and spending and creating new bureaucracies."
- Yet the Government does still spend mightily where it has a mind
- to. The Pentagon has done some tactical trimming but remains the
- biggest Government consumer of all. Defense Secretary Dick Cheney
- is determined to retain as much as possible of the $2.4 trillion
- Reagan-era buildup -- including a scaled-down Star Wars program,
- at about $4 billion; the B-2 bomber, at $535 million each; and the
- Advanced Tactical Fighter, projected at $65 million each.
- </p>
- <p> With defense spending unlikely to increase significantly over
- the next half-decade, both troop strength and some of those weapons
- will have to be sacrificed. Neither the Administration nor Congress
- has suggested what to do. In the meantime, Cheney is proceeding
- with his own priorities. Because of his belief that there has been
- only a temporary thaw in relations with the Soviet Union, the
- Pentagon has barely even begun to assess the U.S.'s real defense
- needs should the change turn out to be permanent.
- </p>
- <p> Various support programs for the middle and upper classes are
- also humming along nicely. Large-scale farmers and well-to-do
- retirees still enjoy federal largesse, as do oil companies and
- people earning more than $200,000 (whose income is taxed at a 28%
- marginal rate, while a working couple with a taxable income of
- $71,900 pays 33%). Those who gain from such Government generosity
- vote -- and contribute money -- in disproportionately high numbers
- and are the heart of the Republican electoral coalition. As long
- as the middle class has remained relatively unaffected by
- Washington's retreat, the Republican strategy has paid off
- handsomely, most recently in Bush's 1988 election and his
- extraordinary 75% current approval rating in the polls. Making sure
- the Republican coalition stays intact seems to be the
- Administration's major priority. Secretary of State James Baker,
- asked to comment on Senate Majority Leader George Mitchell's
- criticism of Bush's tepid handling of the situation in the Soviet
- Union and Eastern Europe, replied, "The President is rocking along
- with a 70% approval rating."
- </p>
- <p> But a TIME poll last week indicated increasing, if still rather
- vague, doubts about the future. Moreover, signs of strain are
- beginning to show at the state and local levels. State officials
- generally find their constituents as opposed to new local taxes as
- they are to the federal kind, except, in several states, when a tax
- is earmarked for a specific need: schools, say, or roads.
- </p>
- <p> In De Kalb County, Ga., however, voters last month
- overwhelmingly rejected a 1% hike in the local sales tax, even
- though it was intended to offset part of the property tax. De
- Kalb's chief executive officer, Manuel Maloof, bemoans the
- deterioration of the federal highways and Washington's
- unwillingness to provide adequate funds for the national highway
- system and toxic-waste removal. But Maloof, a Democrat, is even
- more upset at his own inability to repair his county's sewers and
- pipelines. "It's all a residue of Ronald Reagan," Maloof says."He
- did more than most by telling us you don't have to pay taxes even
- though you still have needs."
- </p>
- <p> The consequences of such government paralysis are most apparent
- in California, where the 1978 Proposition 13 ballot initiative
- sparked the antitax revolt that swept the country. Now, with the
- state government hobbled by tax restrictions and unable to respond
- to public pressure, citizen initiatives have mushroomed. California
- had 29 propositions on its ballot last year on matters ranging from
- limits on auto insurance to new tobacco taxes. William Zimmerman,
- who helps organize such voter initiatives, admits that they are not
- the best way to handle complex issues. But, he says, "if the
- alternative is no action, I'll take the flawed solution."
- </p>
- <p> Citizen initiatives can be an example of democracy at work. But
- in this case they are symptomatic of governmental decay at all
- levels. Once a great engine of social and economic improvement, the
- Federal Government began to lose its bearings in the '60s and '70s
- in the midst of wars, both cold and hot, domestic upheavals and a
- worldwide economic revolution. As the nation's economic base began
- to contract, some basic elements of the American Dream --
- homeownership, a college education -- began slowly to recede. The
- Government responded fitfully to these developments and eventually
- took on the form of a bloated, inefficient, helpless giant.
- </p>
- <p> Jimmy Carter in 1976 and, far more stridently, Ronald Reagan
- in 1980 performed a valuable service by calling attention to the
- giant's weaknesses. But Reagan's approach, once he was elected,
- was fundamentally flawed. So is George Bush's. Government was not
- the problem. The problem was, and still is, that the country was
- being governed badly. The conservative complaint that only liberal
- elitists think Washington must actually do something is
- self-evidently silly. Of course, the Government must do something.
- That is why it exists: to act in ways that improve the lives of its
- citizens and their security in the world. The list of missed
- opportunities and ignored challenges is already much too long. The
- sooner Government sets about doing its job again, the better.
- </p>
- <p>--Dan Goodgame and Richard Hornik/Washington, with other bureaus
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
-