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Ok, I hatched a scheme in my head the other night and I just wanted to put it out there for comment. It seems so simple to me now that I am beginning to worry that it may have already been brought up and beat to death here on DU, so if that is the case I apologize in advance.
For this plan to be most effective, Wesley Clark needs to be our nominee. So lets assume for now that he is. During the general election campaign, Clark and the Dems pound a message that Bush's fiscal irresponsibility is ruining the country. Play up the fact that our national deficit is around 5% of the GDP (a giant red flag for economists), and on top of that we are spending hundreds of billions in Iraq. So what has President Bush done? He cut taxes! His plan is wrong, not because of politics, but because it is just plain bad management. I think the average American can grasp the concept that when you are mired in debt the answer is not cutting your income.
After Clark is elected in a landslide vote (I honestly think this would be the case-unless there are manys skeletons in Clark's closet), the Dems can immediately repeal the Bush tax cuts for the rich because, as was established during the campaign, they were fiscally irresponsible. If the economy is still a mess, they can keep and perhaps even increase the tax cuts for the middle class with the argument that middle class spending is actually what stimulates our economy.
THEN, with the war in Iraq no doubt still draining the treasury, Clark can come out and portray a fiscal crisis so great that even repealing the tax cuts could not stop it. Instead, we must raise taxes so that we can continue to support our operations in Iraq while also addressing the fiscal crisis at home. But we can't raise taxes on the middle class because that would hurt the economy. So instead the Dems can raise taxes once again on the upper class, thereby getting us back to something recognizable as progressive taxation.
The key part of this plan is that it must be sold as a matter of national security. This can be done in two ways, preferably both of them together. The first is to argue that we need to raise taxes to support the war in Iraq. The Republicans cannot oppose this, as they are the ones that got us into the damn war in the first place. The public will buy it because, even though they don't like to have taxes raised, they do like to think that the military has the resources to keep them secure.
The second part of the plan is to portray the national deficit as a matter of national security as well, only from an economic rather than defense standpoint. Argue that the deficit is in danger of consuming the budget and bankrupting the government (which is hardly a stretch). Republicans can counter this with their message that the national deficit is not bad for us, but if the message is pounded enough I believe the public would side with the Dems. After all, Clinton's main accomplishment was to pay down the deficit and we are all fondly remembering the Clinton years.
Now Clark is the best guy to do this because as a retired General he can sell the national security line best. If Clark comes out and says "we need more money for security," I don't think the public are going to resist much.
So what does this plan gain? It gets us back towards progressive taxation and, if done correctly, sets an anti-deficit trend. When the deficit is reduced that will free up even more money (since paying interest on the deficit is the second largest federal expenditure), which means money for programs like universal health care and better education. If the message is sold well enough, tax cuts will no longer be as easy to pass because people will understand them to be fiscally irresponsible.
The Republicans are killing us so badly because they set the agenda and the Dems are always just responding to it. With a plan like this, the Democrats can set the agenda for a change and get something REAL done.
Any thoughts? Is this as good a strategy as I think it is? Are there any drawbacks/concerns?
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