By Bob Herbert
Madness.
I’m not holding my breath, but I would like to see the
self-proclaimed conservative, small government, anti-regulation,
free-market zealots step up and take responsibility for wrecking the
American economy and bringing about the worst financial crisis since the
Depression.
Even now, with the house on fire, the most extreme among them won’t
pick up the fire hoses and try to put it out.
With the fate of the Bush administration’s desperate $700 billion
bailout of the financial industry hanging in the balance, Representative
Darrell Issa, a Republican from California, stuck to his political
playbook like a man covered in Krazy Glue. He pronounced himself “resolute”
in his opposition to the bailout because to be otherwise would amount to a
betrayal of party principles.
To deviate from those principles, in Mr. Issa’s view, would be like
placing “a coffin on top of Ronald Reagan’s coffin.”
We are in very strange territory here.
George H.W. Bush warned us about “voodoo economics” in 1980, but
the ideologues clamped a gag on him and put him on the Gipper’s ticket.
For much of the time since then, the madmen of the right have carried the
day. They were freed of their remaining few restraints with the ascendance
of George W. Bush in 2000.
These were the reckless clowns who led us into the foolish
multitrillion-dollar debacle in Iraq and who crafted tax policies that
enormously benefited millionaires and billionaires while at the same time
ran up staggering amounts of government debt. This is the crowd that
contributed mightily to the greatest disparities in wealth in the U.S.
since the gilded age.
This was the crowd that cut the cords of corporate and financial
regulations and in myriad other ways gleefully hacked away at the best
interests of the United States.
Now we’re looking into the abyss.
When President Bush went on television last week to drum up support for
the bailout package, he looked almost dazed, like someone who’d just
climbed out of an auto wreck.
“Our entire economy is in danger,” he said.
He should have said that he, along with his irresponsible Republican
colleagues and their running buddies in the corporate and financial
sectors, put the entire economy in danger. John McCain and his economic
main man, Phil (“this is a mental recession”) Gramm, were right there
running with them.
Credit markets have frozen almost solid, banks are toppling like
dominoes and brokerage houses are vanishing like props in a magic act. And
who was one of the paramount leaders of the manic anti-regulatory charge
that led to this sorry state of affairs? None other than Mr. Gramm
himself, a former chairman of the Senate Banking Committee.
Where is Mr. Gramm now? Would you believe that he’s the vice chairman
of UBS Securities, the investment banking arm of the Swiss bank UBS? Of
course you would. A New York Times article last spring noted that the “elite
private bankers” of UBS “built a lucrative business in recent years by
discreetly tending the fortunes of American millionaires and billionaires.”
Toadying to the rich while sabotaging the interests of working people
was always Mr. Gramm’s specialty. He was considered a likely choice to
be treasury secretary in a McCain administration until he made his
impolitic “mental recession” comment. He also said the U.S. was a “nation
of whiners.”
The tone-deaf remarks in the midst of severe economic hard times
undermined Senator McCain’s convoluted efforts to reinvent himself as
some kind of populist. But they were wholly in keeping with the economic
worldview of conservative Republicans.
The inescapable disconnect between rhetoric and reality is often stark.
Senator McCain has been ranting recently about the excessive pay and “bloated
golden parachutes” of failed corporate executives. And yet one of his
closest advisers on economic matters is Carly Fiorina, who was forced out
as chief executive of Hewlett-Packard. Her golden parachute was an
estimated $42 million.
Voters have to shoulder a great deal of the blame for the economic mess
the country is in. Too many were willing, for whatever reasons, to support
politicians who spat in the eye of economic common sense. Now the voodoo
that permeated conservative economic policies for so many years has come
back to haunt us big-time.
The question voters should be asking John McCain is whether he has
stopped serving his party’s economic Kool-Aid, which has taken such a
toll on working families, and is ready to change his ways. Is his sudden
populist transformation the real thing or just a mirage?
In the gale force winds of a full-fledged economic hurricane, it’s
fair to ask Senator McCain whether he still considers himself a
conservative, small government, anti-regulation, free-market zealot. Or
whether he’s seen the light.