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--></style><title>Bush Pedigree / tax-shelter
salesman</title></head><body>
<div><font size="-4" color="#000000"><b>It takes a Republican to show
the Democrats what's up.</b></font></div>
<div><font size="-4" color="#000000"><b>Marta</b></font></div>
<div><font size="-4" color="#000000"><b><br></b></font></div>
<div><font color="#000000"><b>LA Times Opinion pages</b></font></div>
<div><font color="#000000"><b>ECONOMY</b><br>
<br>
<b>A Tax Cut Plan Rooted in the Bush Pedigree</b><br>
By Kevin Phillips<br>
Kevin Phillips is the author, most recently, of "Wealth and
Democracy: A Political History of the American Rich."<br>
<br>
January 12 2003<br>
WASHINGTON -- For those who ever believed in it, Washington
"compassionate conservatism" just took off its mask. Federal
deficits are soaring. State finances are sinking into their biggest
crisis since the Great Depression. So, what does the Bush White House
propose?<br>
No serious help for the states. Nor is there relief from payroll taxes
to encourage job creation. Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) has rightly
remarked on the lack of compassion in the administration's economic
stimulus package. Its centerpiece, costing $364 billion of the $674
billion to be spent over 10 years, is to reduce or end taxation of
dividends, some 40% of which annually goes to the top 1% of wealthy
Americans. What this complicated proposal would stimulate is not the
workaday economy but the already huge gap between the wealthiest
Americans and everyone else.<br>
Historically, this is the great Republican Achilles' heel --
favoritism to the rich. The 2003 Bush tax cut proposal is the biggest,
baldest example since the 1920s, when Treasury Secretary Andrew Mellon
decided that if Congress wouldn't let him cut income tax rates enough
he'd just start giving money back, to individuals and corporations
alike, through Treasury refunds, rebates and remissions. Given this
recurrent thread over eight decades of GOP fiscal history, White House
and congressional Republicans may be setting up a dangerous issue for
the 2004 elections.<br>
Still, you have to admire GOP chutzpah. Boldness often pays.
Republicans are gambling that ordinary Americans are too numb or too
dumb -- either one works -- to go beyond the 20-second sound bites to
see who gets the meringue and who gets the filet mignon. They're
gambling that John and Jane Q. Public won't comprehend a thinly
disguised bailout of upper-income stock investors as another round of
old GOP trickle-down economics.<br>
It's been 10 years since the first President Bush was voted out of the
White House on a wave of public indignation at his economic policies
-- in particular, over how he had no sense of what was happening on
Main Street. All he could ever talk about was cutting the capital
gains tax rate on behalf of investors.<br>
You'd think that anyone at least 40 years old would remember that
myopia. You'd think they'd remember the old adage about the acorn not
falling too far from the tree. Because that's the economics involved:
Like father, like son. In fact, we can go further: Like
great-grandfather, like grandfather, like father, like uncles, like
siblings, like son. The predominant history of the Bush family for 100
years has been to work in the investment business (sometimes with an
oil tilt); interpret the economy through the lens of investment; and
tailor economic policies to favor friends, neighbors and relatives in
the investment business.<br>
If a president who came out of the widget industry spent all his time
trying to promote the widget business, it would be obvious -- and it
would raise major ethical problems. But the magnitude of the Bushes'
investment involvement and bias is too little understood.<br>
Great-grandfather George H. Walker was the president of two major New
York investment firms: G.H. Walker & Co. and W.A. Harriman and Co.
Grandfather Prescott Bush was the managing partner of Brown Bros.,
Harriman & Co. Presidential uncles Jonathan and Prescott Jr. have
been, respectively, the heads of small investment firms named J. Bush
& Co. and Prescott Bush & Co. Prescott Bush Jr. has also been
closely involved with Asset Management International Financing and
Settlement Ltd. Presidential brother Marvin runs hedge funds at
investment company Winston Partners. Presidential brother Neil started
an investment deal in Austin, and both George H.W. and George W. Bush
have been in the kind of oil business that is largely driven by tax
shelters and financing from friends and relatives.</font></div>
<div><font color="#000000">Such finance doesn't look out for widows
and orphans. Besides President Bush's problems with the Securities and
Exchange Commission over his sale of Harken Energy stock, his uncle,
Scott Pierce, resigned as president of the now-defunct securities firm
E.F. Hutton after pleading guilty on behalf of the firm to
check-kiting. Brother Neil was fined because of his culpability in the
Silverado savings and loan debacle in Colorado in the 1980s. A Tokyo
investment firm that hired Uncle Prescott as an advisor in 1989 was
identified by Tokyo police as a mob front. The point is simply that
the average American could be forgiven for thinking that the Bush
motto is "public service means private opportunity."<br>
Which is why this latest embrace of "investment" is not only
unfair but the policy equivalent of self-dealing. When the Bushes
start talking about investment, ordinary folks should start circling
their Chevrolets. But can such a mix of historical evidence ever make
it through the terrorism and war milieu now in operation? Can voters
smell greed through the reek of aviation gasoline in the Persian
Gulf?<br>
In a sense, war itself is becoming a shelter for would-be tax
shelters. When World War II broke out, public and congressional
skepticism still reflected the role of finance in the 1929 Wall Street
crash. Taxes on the dividend income of the rich were high, so, as war
profits flowed in, many companies cut dividends and used the capital
to pump up their stock prices. The higher prices would translate into
capital gains, which were taxed at a lower rate. The partial remedy
was to tax excess corporate profits, but critics said that even this
did not reach subtly retained income.<br>
Instead of becoming a spur to rein in excess profits, flying bullets
have become covering fire for political opportunism: Bill Clinton's
1998 cruise missile attacks on Sudan and Afghanistan timed to divert
attention from his personal peccadilloes, Republican willingness to
wag the dog to take the focus off class-driven economics. Meanwhile,
no wartime excess-profits tax has been imposed on corporate America
since the United Nations endorsed and launched the Korean War in 1950,
and we can assume that the Bush administration will not request one if
the international body signs off on an invasion of Iraq. Rather, the
administration is seeking to gut the dividend tax under the dubious
pretense of stimulus and long-term growth -- possibly even in the name
of making the United States a nation worthy of the men and women in
uniform who may be fighting and dying in the Middle East (as Congress
weighs this fiscal shamelessness).<br>
Will the Democrats, who in recent years have baa-baaed around
Washington like clueless sheep on an Idaho hillside, somehow turn and
swing this issue like a political power saw? They show some movement,
but they have displayed too little knowledge of their own history --
Thomas Jefferson's fear of the money power; Franklin D. Roosevelt's
bold use of the inheritance tax; Harry S. Truman's lambasting of Wall
Street -- to assume that they can call up a memory of the Republican
fiscal heritage, however vulnerable.<br>
Yet, the vulnerability is potentially huge. As Bush fiscal policy suns
itself in the mentality of Coolidge-Hoover-era Treasury Secretary
Mellon, it disdains the better legacies of other GOP presidents.
Dwight D. Eisenhower favored taxes on excess wartime profits; Richard
Nixon signed legislation imposing a higher top tax rate on unearned,
rather than earned, income; Ronald Reagan's 1986 tax reform insisted
on equal top rates for earned versus stock-market income, eliminating
the preference for capital gains. The first President Bush was the
succeeding president who cried incessantly to restore capital-gains
favoritism to investors. We should also mention Theodore Roosevelt,
who called in peacetime for the progressive tax on large inherited
fortunes that George W. Bush works to eliminate in wartime; and
Abraham Lincoln, whose wartime taxes covered dividend income.<br>
The Lincoln-Roosevelt-Eisenhower-Nixon-Reagan viewpoint still commands
a fair minority of the Republican rank and file, if not among its
Bush-era leadership. The only major Republican voice speaking for the
old party, however, is that of McCain, who said in December, "We
probably need to have tax cuts directed at lower-income Americans,
such as payroll-tax reductions. ... [L]ow-income Americans in totality
bear a much higher tax burden than wealthy Americans do; therefore,
there is a growing gap between the wealthiest and poorest Americans."
He scoffed at the notion that Bush's tax policy embodies compassionate
conservatism. McCain's father and grandfather were four-star admirals;
he learned a different tradition than that of the tax-shelter
salesmen.</font></div>
<div><font color="#000000">It is probably too much to expect
Republican McCain to lead the fight against the kind of arrogant
misprioritization that earmarks $364 billion, out of a $674 billion
economic "stimulus" program, for ending the taxation of
stock market dividends. But surely the Democrats must. If they're
afraid to fight under the old Democratic banners of Jefferson,
Jackson, FDR and Truman, this time they can invoke the Republican
fiscal precedents of Lincoln, Teddy Roosevelt, Eisenhower, Nixon and
Reagan.</font></div>
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<div>Marta Russell<br>
Los Angeles, CA<br>
http://www.disweb.org</div>
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