* TO COMPARE AND CONTRAST TO THE "BUSH" REPUBLICANS...
* BY "TEA PARTY" REPUBLICAN U.S. SENATOR MIKE
LEE
For five years now, the Republican party has attacked the
economic policies of President Barack Obama as “crony capitalism.” And with
good reason!
From the stimulus to cash-for-clunkers, from the bailouts
to cap-and-trade, from Dodd-Frank to ObamaCare, every name-brand initiative of
the Obama era has distorted public policy to privileged, well-connected
insiders and elites at the expense of taxpayers and consumers.
(*NOD*)
Republicans have slammed all this “corporate welfare” and
“venture socialism” for unfairly “picking winners and losers in the
marketplace.” In 2012 - for the first time - “crony capitalism” was even
singled out for condemnation in the Republican party platform.
(*APPLAUSE*)
Policy privilege corrupts the free market by rewarding
political connections over competitive excellence. It subverts the rule of law
by codifying inequality. It undermines social solidarity by pitting citizens
against one another, twisting cooperative communities into rival special
interests. The [Establishment] Right’s [verbal] resistance to corporatism is a
welcome development. Special-interest favoritism represents a uniquely
malignant threat to the economic, political, and social ecosystem that makes
America exceptional.
Obamanomics has delivered record corporate profits but
sagging middle-class wages and an anemic, jobless recovery. It has promoted and
exacerbated inequality. It has isolated the poor and squeezed the middle class.
* ALL TRUE!
It has also exposed the president’s party to extreme
political vulnerability. But to seize this opportunity — to fix what’s broken
in Washington and our economy — a still-distrusted GOP first must end cronyism
in our own ranks. The GOP has to close its branch of the Beltway Favor Bank and
truly embrace a free-enterprise economy of, by, and for the people.
(*STANDING OVATION*)
Imagine a reformed Republican party seizing the moral
high ground against political corruption and economic dysfunction. Imagine its
leaders, advocating populist, free-market reforms to restore jobs, growth, and
fairness to the economy. Faster than you can say “TARP” we could pin the Left
between their egalitarian facade and their elitist agenda, and force them to
choose between K Street and Main Street. That Republican party could not only
unify and excite conservatives, but appeal to hardworking families in the
purple and blue communities that President Obama’s special-interest favoritism
is leaving behind.
(*NOD*)
For three years now, Republican leaders have challenged
anti-establishment conservatives to come up with a viable plan to make
principled conservatism inclusive and popular — to grow our party into a
national majority. Well, here it is. The question is whether Republicans’
Obama-era opposition to policy privilege has been sincere or situational.
* SITUATIONAL...
(*SIGH*)
One test will be this summer’s expiring congressional
authorization of the federal Export Import Bank.
* WHICH SHOULD HAVE BEEN CLOSED DOWN LAST YEAR!
The Ex-Im Bank exists to dole out taxpayer-backed loan
guarantees to help American exporters. Most of the benefits go to large
corporations that are perfectly capable of securing private financing anywhere
in the world.
* YEP...
In short, Congress allows the Ex-Im Bank to unnecessarily
risk taxpayer money to subsidize well-connected private companies.
* YEP...
President Obama himself called the program “little more
than a fund for corporate welfare” back in 2008, when total taxpayer exposure
to Ex-Im Bank guarantees was less than half its size today.
* BUT NOTE... OBAMA ISN'T LISTED AS A CO-AUTHOR OF THIS
PIECE...
(*CHUCKLE*)
* AS HYPOCRITICAL AS THE GOP ESTABLISHMENT IS... THE DEMS
ARE - BY AND LARGE - WORSE.
Whether the beneficiaries of particular Ex-Im Bank loan
guarantees are respected, successful companies like Boeing or crony basket
cases like Solyndra is irrelevant. Twisting policy to benefit any business at
the expense of others is unfair and anti-growth.
* HEAR! HEAR!
Whether congressional Republicans say so — and do
something about it — during the coming Ex-Im Bank debate will tell us a lot
about what, and who, the party really stands for in 2014 and beyond.
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