[lbo-talk] How Norquist made tax cutting into an unbreakable oath

Michael Pollak mpollak at panix.com
Tue Nov 22 09:24:19 PST 2011


http://www.rollingstone.com/politics/news/grover-norquist-the-billionaires-best-friend-20111109

November 24, 2011 issue [Posted Nov 9] Rolling Stone

Grover Norquist: The Billionaires' Best Friend How the anti-tax activist hijacked the GOP on behalf of the rich

By Tim Dickinson

Grover Norquist has never held elected office. He's not a political

appointee or a congressional staffer, and few voters know his name. Yet

this anti-tax lobbyist wields immense power over the Republican Party,

enforcing a hard-line position that compels the GOP to protect tax

breaks for the rich and billions in federal subsidies for America's

wealthiest corporations. "It all comes from a single guy," says Alan

Simpson, the former Republican senator. So how does Norquist do it?

Norquist's influence over the GOP began in 1985, when Ronald Reagan

tapped the little-known staffer at the Chamber of Commerce to head up

Americans for Tax Reform, a pressure group organized to push a

comprehensive tax package through Congress. With backing from the

Chamber, Norquist - a Harvard MBA and former head of the College

Republicans - challenged GOP candidates to take a two-part pledge: that

they would never raise taxes, and that they would only close tax

loopholes if the additional revenue was used to pay for further tax

cuts. Before long, he had 102 congressmen and 16 senators signed up.

Over the past 25 years, Norquist has received funding from many of

America's wealthiest corporations, including Philip Morris, Pfizer and

Microsoft. To build a farm team of anti-tax conservatives, Norquist

shrewdly took the pledge to state legislatures across the country,

pressuring up-and- coming Republicans to make it a core issue before

they're called up to the big leagues. "We're branding the whole party

that way," Norquist says. "The people who are going to be running for

Congress in 10 or 20 years are coming out of state legislatures with a

history with the pledge."

Norquist also built the anti-tax pledge into the DNA of the GOP by

hosting weekly Wednesday meetings that enable activist groups

representing everyone from gun nuts to home-schoolers to mix with top

business lobbyists and conservative officials. The meetings, which

began shortly after Bill Clinton was elected, turned Norquist into the

Republican Party's foremost power broker - and gave him a forum to

enforce the no-new-taxes pledge as the centerpiece of the GOP's

strategy. "The tax issue," he says, "is the one thing everyone agrees

on."

Norquist cemented his influence by forging an early alliance with Karl

Rove and setting himself up as a gatekeeper to George W. Bush's inner

circle. Then, after Obama was elected, this ultimate Washington insider

positioned himself as a leader of the anti-establishment Tea Party,

complete with financial support from the billionaire Koch brothers.

"These Tea Party people, in effect, take their orders from him," says

Bruce Bartlett, an architect of the Reagan tax cuts. "He decides: This

is a permissible tax action, or this is not a permissible tax action.

And of course, anything that cuts taxes is per se OK."

Today, GOP politicians who have signed Norquist's anti-tax pledge

include every top Republican running for president, 13 governors, 1,300

state lawmakers, 40 of the 47 Republicans in the Senate, and 236 of the

242 Republicans in the House. What's more, the GOP's Tea Party foot

soldiers are marshaled by House Majority Leader Eric Cantor - a veteran

of Norquist's farm team, who first signed the pledge as an ambitious

member of the Virginia legislature. Under Cantor's leadership,

Norquist's anti-tax pledge was directly responsible for last summer's

debt-ceiling standoff that wrecked the nation's credit rating by

leading the nation to the brink of default. "Congress was willing to

cause severe economic damage to the entire population," marvels Paul

O'Neill, Bush's former Treasury secretary, "simply because they were

slaves to an idiot's idea of how the world works."



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