The Washington Post - February 13,
2005
Sclerosis
Meets the Terminator
By George F.
Will
AN
FRANCISCO -- Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, Austria's gift to American politics
and other entertainments, cannot be president because he is not a
"natural born citizen," but that does not mean his political power
is confined to California. This state is so big -- the economy of Los Angeles
County is almost as large as Russia's -- that the continent can reverberate
from what happens here, and Schwarzenegger expects much to happen in the next
10 months.
Speaking in his office here, he
combines a keen sense of California's role in the nation, and of his role in
California, with an actor's sense of an audience. "In most states,"
he says happily, "nothing is going on this year." So attention will
be given to what is going on here. And "if we win, they will get
energy." By "they" he means people and political forces across
the country who are eager to emulate his distinctive brand of libertarian
conservatism.
His libertarianism extends beyond the
theory of political economy he encountered as a young man in the writings of
Milton Friedman and beyond the exuberant entrepreneurialism of his life, to
social issues. He favors abortion rights, does not care if any state's voters
endorse gay marriage and has "no use" for a constitutional amendment
barring that. Hence some Republicans consider him useful but not a proper
communicant in the church of true conservatism. However, his conservatism,
more than theirs, is the point of the spear in conservatism's primary
political challenge -- defeating liberalism's attempt to Europeanize America.
He proposes -- the legislature
probably will balk; then the voters will decide in referendums -- to cut
spending across the board when the budget is not balanced and to adopt
nonpartisan redistricting by a panel of retired judges. This latter might pick
the lock that the Democratic Party and its base in the public employees unions
-- government organized as an interest group -- have on the legislature.
Schwarzenegger's program aims to curtail the distributional politics that
drive government's expansion.
Today's Democratic Party is defined
by its deepening devotion to government distribution of income to its clients
-- to the education-social services complex. This explains what the county map
of the 2004 presidential vote reveals: There are very few mostly blue states.
Democrats increasingly depend on city and university-town concentrations of
voters who work in that complex.
California, where per capita spending
in constant dollars has more than tripled in five decades, is burdened by the
sort of growth-inhibiting government that has plagued some American cities.
Writing in the Weekly Standard, Joel Kotkin, author of the forthcoming book
"The City: A Global History," distinguishes between America's "aspirational"
cities and "Euro-American" cities. The former -- e.g., Atlanta;
Boise, Idaho; Charlotte; Fort Myers and Orlando, Fla.; Las Vegas and Reno,
Nev.; Phoenix; and Salt Lake City -- are thriving. The latter -- e.g., Boston,
Chicago, New York, Philadelphia and San Francisco -- are experiencing social
fragmentation as government's clients fight over dwindling scarce resources,
and many of these cities are losing population, often to the aspirational
cities.
Euro-American cities, where teachers
unions prevent improvements in public education and "municipal welfare
states" keep living costs high, increasingly attract affluent and often
childless liberals: Seattle, Kotkin says, "has roughly the same
population it did in 1960, but barely half as many children."
Euro-American cities have, in varying degrees, the malady known in the 1970s
as "the British disease," when Britain was called, as Turkey once
was, "the sick man of Europe."
The malady is the result of a
perverse cycle: Public-sector unions produce, through their power to elect
allies, high levels of spending for social services. This results in a
constantly expanding demand for government spending and ever more public
employees and hence still more union power.
The British disease was in America by
1975, in New York City, which effectively went bankrupt. Writing in the winter
2005 issue of the Public Interest ["Gotham's Fiscal Crisis: Lessons
Unlearned"], E.J. McMahon of the Manhattan Institute and Fred Siegel, a
history professor at the Cooper Union for the Advancement of Art and Science,
recount New York's debilitation by "distributional public-sector politics
that took the private sector for granted." By 1975, 340,000 people were
on the city's payroll, and more than 1 million were on welfare.
Adopting the language of therapy,
Schwarzenegger says legislators are "like addicts" and his program
is "an intervention": "You slowly narrow down how much you give
them."
It is quite a spectacle: An immigrant
from Europe, familiar with the social sclerosis induced by that continent's
statism, is toiling to inoculate this state against those ailments. Only in
America.
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