| 1999
Executive Summary
Last year’s session of Congress was
simply awful. Although our side controlled both
the House and the Senate, albeit with a very
narrow margin in the House, we were unable to
cut taxes at all, and had to settle for
"restraining" the increase in
spending. Nevertheless, the 1999 Republican
Liberty Index demonstrates that the American
voter will have a clear choice in this year’s
election.
As in the past,
the index is based on twenty roll call votes in
each of two areas: economic liberties and
personal liberties. In the economic liberties
component of the index, votes involved spending,
taxing, regulating, trade policy, the
environment, labor and health care. In the
personal liberties component, votes involved
campaign finance reform, the war in Kosovo,
draft registration, parental choice in
education, the 2nd Amendment,
tax-financed art, animal rights, and one-world
government. The specific votes are listed below.
Senate
Ratings
The gap
between Republicans and Democrats in the Senate,
which had grown to an unprecedented width in
1998, grew even more in 1999. The average
Republican combined score was 78 and the average
Democratic combined score ten. Indeed, only one
Democrat, Feingold (WI), with a combined score
of 29, was not placed in the
"authoritarian" area of our six-part
classification scheme.
The highest
combined score was achieved by Don Nickles of
Oklahoma, a 95, who, along with Kyl (AZ), got a
perfect 100 in the economics component of the
index. The lowest combined score was achieved by
Jay Rockefeller of West Virginia, a 6, who,
along with Cleland (GA), Edwards (NC) and Leahy
(VT), got a perfect zero (from the authoritarian
perspective) in the economics component.
As always, the
economic component showed the greater clarity.
The Democrats ranged from zero to 20, and the
Republicans from 49 to 100. (There was no such
gap on the personal liberties component of the
index.) There is a real difference between the
two major parties: If it concerns economic
activity, the Democrats want to prohibit,
mandate, regulate, tax, subsidize, or
nationalize it.
Senate
Rollcalls
In addition to
the six "perfect" scores already
mentioned, 21 Senators made either one bad vote
out of twenty, or one good vote. Sixteen of
these inconsistent votes involved either the
sugar program or the milk marketing program, and
were thus obviously due to sectional interest.
Two others involved international trade with
Sub-Sahara Africa and were cast by the looney
ladies of the left coast, Boxer (CA) and Murray
(WA), who will allow free enterprise but only if
it benefits people with the right skin color.
On the personal
liberties component of the index, the
Republicans were not as good, and the Democrats
not as bad. The Republicans cannot be said to
consistently support personal liberty, but they
are demonstrably better than the Democrats. The
political spectrum has shifted considerably (but
not completely) into a "libertarian"
versus "authoritarian" orientation.
House
Ratings
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Ron Paul
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In the U.S.
House of Representatives, there was a five-way
tie for first place, with Ron Paul of Texas, the
defending #1, joined by Armey (TX), Hoekstra
(MI), Schaffer (CO) and Toomey (PA). Paul thus
becomes our second three-peat champion of
liberty, the first having been Dana Rohrabacher
of California who accomplished this feat during
the early ‘90s. Paul not only has the highest,
the second highest, and a tie for the third
highest ever combined score, in the three years
since his return to the Congress, he has helped
to re-orient the Republican caucus towards a
more libertarian direction.
Last year, there
were no 100’s in the economics component, but
there were five zero’s: Capuano (MA), De Lauro
(CT), Filner (CA), Lantos (CA) and
Royball-Allard (CA). Among the twenty-eight near
misses (i.e., members who had only one wrong or
one right vote), most were due to the votes to
repeal Glass-Steagel (which bill had some
objectionable provisions), trade with Sub-Sahara
Africa, and the Space Station.
For the first
time in the history of our index, there was a
"perfect" score in the area of
personal liberties. Carolyn McCarthy of New York
scored a "perfect" zero. As much as we
sympathize with this woman, taking away our
rights would not be a fitting memorial to her
son whose life was snuffed out by a crazed
lunatic on a commuter railroad. To honor him, we
should, instead, resolve to hold criminals
accountable for their foul deeds, and reach out
in love and understanding to the victims of
crime.
Difficult Votes
Among those who did
very well in the area of personal liberties, the
two most difficult votes were deferring to state
law on physician-assisted suicide and the Flag
Desecration Constitutional Amendment. Among
those who did very poorly, only one vote was
difficult, the physician-assisted suicide vote.
Pro-life sentiment makes it hard for many
Republicans to reconcile leaving such matters
such as physician-assisted suicide to the
states. On the other hand, even the most
strident Democrats will defer to individual
choice or to state’s rights if the result is
pro-abortion, pro-euthanasia, pro-eugenics, etc.
The more
surprising finding is that fewer and fewer
Democrats have problems with violating freedom
of speech, whether it is desecrating the flag,
speech codes on college campuses, outlawing hate
speech, or regulating campaign finance. The idea
that Democrats are better than Republicans on
personal liberties is simply no longer true.
Republicans may be inconsistent in their
commitment to personal liberties, but they are
certainly better than Democrats.
Draft
Registration
Last year, we
made another attempt to end draft registration.
The last time we tried was in 1995, when the
House VA-HUD Appropriations Subcommittee X’ed
it out of the budget only to see the full House
restore funding. You could say we only got to
first base. This time, the full House failed,
187-232, to restore funding, so we got to second
base. Unfortunately, funding was restored in the
House-Senate conference committee. Hopefully, we
will soon get the Senate to agree to end draft
registration (a triple), and then get the
President’s signature (a home-run).
The Kosovo War
Congressional
action regarding the war in Kosovo may have been
confusing at the time, but in retrospect it is
crystal clear. On March 11, the House of
Representative approved House Concurrent
Resolution 42, 219-191, authorizing deployment
of U.S. military forces to Kosovo as part of a
NATO peacekeeping operation implementing a
Kosovo peace agreement (emphasis added). This
followed the defeat of Congresswoman Tillie
Fowler’s (R-FL) substitute resolution which
would have barred deployment, 178-237. The
qualification of "implementing a Kosovo
peace agreement" was intended to mean that
U.S. forces would enter the area as
peace-keepers, not as combatants. But this
qualification was not a concern to Bill Clinton,
who stretches the meaning of words to fit his
desires.
Then, on March
23, the Senate passed Senate Concurrent
Resolution 21, 58-41, authorizing air operations
in Kosovo. A subsequent motion to authorize
"all means necessary" was tabled
(i.e., killed) 78-22. Thus, air operations only
were authorized by Congress. And, instead of
sending in ground forces, we proceeded to bomb
the other side into submission. While we regret
the resultant warfare, and the NATO-sanctioned
resumption of ethnic cleansing by Kosovar
Albanians of Kosovar Serbs and Gypsies, at least
none of our guys got killed in that God-forsaken
place.
The F-18 Raptor
One of the limitations of the index is
its dependence on roll call votes. Often,
crucial decisions are made in committees, and
involve only a few members of Congress. As
readers of this newsletter know, we have
consistently opposed billion dollar boondoggles
such as the Space Station, the breeder-reactor
and the B-1 bomber, every one of which has been
a miserable failure. Last year, all the action
regarding one of the on-going boondoggles –
the F-22 – occurred at the committee-level.
According to the
U.S. Air Force, the F-22 fighter (with a
projected price tag of $124 million apiece) is
designed to maintain the superiority we
currently enjoy with the F-15 and F-16 fighters
(which cost $45 and $25 million apiece). Key to
the performance of the F-22 are two
supercomputers which help fly the aircraft, and
which give the pilot a "God’s eye
view" of airspace.
While the F-22
is a technological wonder, it seems to us that
the Air Force has overlooked one small fact.
Namely, there is no longer anybody out there
developing next-generation fighters. So, whom
are we trying to stay ahead of? (Besides, if the
Russian Communists were as smart as the Chinese
Communists, they wouldn’t have even tried to
keep up with our defense technology, since they
could have bought access to everything they
wanted from the Democrats.)
Last year, the
House Defense Appropriations Subcommittee,
chaired by Jerry Lewis of California, cut
funding of the F-22 from the $1.9 billion
contained in the President’s budget. Later,
the defense appropriation was approved by the
entire House without a separate vote on the
F-22.
As the Senate
appropriation provided the $1.9 billion
requested by the President for the F-22, the
matter had to be address by a House-Senate
conference committee. The conference committee
basically reached a compromise, providing about
$1 billion, $725 million for continuing research
and development which includes the production of
six prototypes and $277 million for components
which could be used for ten more.
While we didn’t
achieve a complete victory, thanks to
Congressman Lewis and other realistic
pro-defense members of the House Defense
Appropriations Subcommittee, we achieved a lot.
However, because not one roll call vote was cast
on this issue, it doesn’t show up in our
index.

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