This is what I believe also but I thought we were going to hold both house of Congress in '06. The Dems are hurting themselves but they have a strong ally in the 527 Drive By Media and the word may never get out. If the conservatives stay home and don't vote in '08, the war and the country will be lost. Lawrence Kudlow is pretty smart I hope he is right.
Dooming Themselves to Defeat The Democratic party
may be convincing itself that it’s riding high in the polls toward a
White House victory in next year’s election. But you know what? On two
key themes -- taxes and national security -- the Democrats may be
dooming themselves to defeat.
Watching the two presidential debates, one can’t help but notice the
stark differences between each party’s approach to these core issues.
And it’s hard to see how the general electorate is going to buy what
the Democrats are selling.
To a person, each Democratic presidential candidate wants to undermine
the global war against jihadist terrorism -- wherever it may be and
especially in Iraq. The Democrats see a civil war in Iraq, where the
Republicans view a growing al Qaeda threat. And while Republicans talk
about significantly increasing the defense budget and expanding
American force levels for all the armed services, the Democrats are
hoping for some sort of Iraqi peace dividend upon immediate withdrawal
-- one that can be re-channeled into higher domestic social spending.
To a person, each Democratic presidential candidate also wants to raise
taxes on the rich and roll back President Bush’s tax cuts. The
Republicans, however, understand that those tax cuts have propelled
economic growth and contributed to a stock market boom. And they
recognize that Bush’s Goldilocks bull-market economy -- which I call
the greatest story never told -- relies on extending the investor tax
cuts and perhaps even moving forward with a flat tax or national sales
tax.
Finally, to a person, each Democratic presidential candidate also has
it in for corporate America. The Democrats discuss various punishments
for business -- especially oil companies, but also drug, utility, and
insurance firms. Not so for the Republicans, who talk about helping
businesses and promoting entrepreneurship in our successful
free-enterprise economy.
The differences between the two parties couldn’t be clearer, and next
year the voting public will have a very stark choice. But with this
election season only two debates old, that choice already favors the
Republican position.
Think of it: The Democrats talk about ending “tax cuts for the rich,”
all while bashing American corporations. But isn’t this is the same
tired message that sunk Al Gore, Mike Dukakis, Walter Mondale, and
Jimmy Carter? It’s never been a winner, and it’s going to help cripple
whoever grabs the Democratic nomination next year.
And as former Commentary editor Norman Podhoretz has written, as the
Democrats pay too much attention to the left wing of their party, their
defeatist, weak-on-national-security riff may have already sunk them in
2008. Consider this: When the appropriate time comes for a gradual
troop withdrawal from Iraq, the voting public is far more likely to
want a tough-on-defense president to negotiate the event. Go all the
way back to the Korean War. Voters selected General Dwight D.
Eisenhower to negotiate withdrawal, rather than the much more liberal
Adlai Stevenson. Or recall that in 1968 voters chose the tough-minded
Richard Nixon to manage a pullout from South Vietnam, rather than the
fuzzy-thinking Hubert Humphrey.
Here’s another example of the ever-widening void that separates each
party’s stable of candidates, and of the fact-versus-fiction choice
that awaits voters in 2008: House and Senate Democrats are in the
process of crafting a five-year budget resolution that leaves out
investor tax-cut extensions for capital gains and dividends. They say
they are trying to balance the budget and increase tax revenues. Yet
the latest budget report unequivocally shows that these very same
investor tax cuts have paid for themselves.
Non-withheld income taxes -- read cap-gains, dividends, and income from
small owner-operated businesses -- hit a record high of $49 billion on
April 24. So far this year, this tax-collection category has shot up 30
percent, while withheld income-tax collections at lower tax rates have
jumped 17.5 percent. In other words, the Laffer curve is working: lower tax rates
lead to higher tax revenues through a growing economy and a larger
income base. By removing pro-growth tax cuts, the Democratic budget
will actually slow the economy, diminish revenue growth, and increase
the out-year budget gap.
Ignoring all this, in addition to the reality of a 4.5 percent
unemployment rate and Dow 13,000, is a Democratic triumph of liberal
ideology over objective empirical analysis.
It’s also a recipe for Democratic disaster about a year and half from now.
By Lawrence Kudlow
Wednesday, May 9, 2007
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