| 1996
Executive Summary
The 1996
Republican Liberty Index of the U.S. Congress,
like previous ones, is based on forty key votes,
twenty in each of two components: economics and
civil liberties. In the area of economics, key
votes include the tax supermajority
constitutional amendment, votes to override
presidential vetoes of shareholder lawsuit and
product liability reform, the farm bill, medical
savings accounts, welfare reform, the minimum
wage, entitlement reform, defense spending and
the space station. In the area of civil
liberties, key votes include the term limits
constitutional amendment, school choice,
campaign finance reform, the immigration bill,
same-sex marriage, repeal of the assault weapons
ban, the anti-terrorism bill, and drug testing.
Issue Variances
As in the past,
there is a clear difference between Republicans
and Democrats on economic issues. For the
average member of Congress, this difference--on
a scale of zero to 100--is thirty to forty
points. Also as in the past, there was less of a
difference between Republicans and Democrats on
civil liberties. However, here, the gap that was
formerly small appears to be widening. Democrats
have been noticeably sucking up to foreign
interventionism, the federalization of crime in
the name of “anti-terrorism,” extending the
war on drugs to tobacco and alcohol, regulating
speech on television and in political campaigns.
Even though key votes in the area of civil
liberties are carefully selected in order to
avoid unintended correlation of libertarian
voting with (old fashioned) conservative or
liberal voting, the drift of the Democrats away
from civil liberties seems to be making its way
into the index.
Senate
Rating Leaders
In
the Senate, Brown (R-CO) and Lugar (R-IN), the
only two Senators who are classified as “libertarians,”
achieved the highest combined scores, 76 and 75.
Brown, who did not run for re-election, had
previously been #1 in 1992. On the economics
component, Brown got 90, and McCain (R-AZ) and
Coats (R-IN) got 85’s. On the civil liberties
component, Stevens (R-AK) and Bennet (R-UT) got
79’s. The three lowest combined scores, 22,
were set by Bingaman (D-NM), Byrd (D-WV) and
Reid (D-NV). Of course, from an authoritarian
perspective, from which the government should
intervene in both economic and personal matters,
these three senators would be viewed as the very
best!
House
Rating Leaders
In the House
of Representatives, the highest combined score,
89, was achieved by McInnis (R-CO), followed by
Souder (R-IN), 86, Scarborough (R-FL), 85, and
by Chabot (R-OH), Inglis (R-SC), and Portman
(R-OH), 84. On the economics component, there
were two 100’s: Bass (R-NH) and Hoekstra
(R-MI). Bass is the first repeat 100-scorer,
having gotten a 100 on the economics component
in 1995. There were also had six near misses,
two due to wrong-votes on the space station, and
one each to wrong-votes on dolphin-safe
labeling, shipbuilder subsidies, defense
spending and peanut price supports. The
scattering of wrong votes resulting in
near-misses verifies that, while many of the key
votes in the economics area are tough, the votes
are pretty much indicative of pro-free market
sentiment.
Scoring Extremes
There was
one near miss for perfectly bad on the economics
component. Rahal (D-WV) got only one vote right,
and that one vote was a quirk. His one right
vote was to oppose substituting the so-called
“coalition” budget resolution for the
Republican budget resolution. He opposed the
substitution not because it would have
authorized more spending than the Republican
budget resolution (the presumed reason), but did
because it did not contain enough
spending.
On the civil
liberties component, we had three 80’s:
McInnis, 84, and Ensign and Scarborough, 83. The
lowest score, 18, was attained by Bryant (D-FL).
And, by far the lowest score for a Republican,
21, was attained by Leach (R-IA). This low score
was in addition to Leach’s inept chairmanship
of the house banking committee.
Classification
Scheme
A few
concluding comments regarding the RLC
classification scheme are in order. From the
vantage point of the RLC, it is difficult if not
impossible to accurately label many politicians.
On the one hand there are those who,
more-or-less, fall on the new, authoritarian
versus libertarian political spectrum, and with
whom the two dimensional index does a relatively
good job. But, on the other hand hand, there are
politicians who appear to have no guiding
compass to public policy, and who may be
confused by echoes from the past liberal versus
conservative spectrum, relative to the partisan
tugs of the new authoritarian versus libertarian
spectrum. In addition, certain politicians want
particularly to appear to be “moderate” or
“bi-partisan,” whatever these things are
supposed to mean, and to undercut the political
opposition by adopting their positions. Bill
Clinton’s re-election team characterized such
political cross-dressing as “triangulation.”
And. while Clinton may be the undisputed master
of it, the RLC index demonstrates that he is not
the only practitioner of it.

Clifford
F. Thies e-mail
Past Chairman, Republican Liberty Caucus
Professor of Economics and Finance
at Shenandoah University
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