Conservative PickpocketsRobert L. BorosageOctober 11, 2006Robert L. Borosage is co-director of the Campaign For America's Future. With casualties rising in the Iraqi chaos abroad and the congressional page scandals at home, President Bush wants to change the subject to taxes and the economy. “Our nation has got this choice to make,” he said in Macon, Ga., Tuesday at yet another Republican fundraiser: “Keep taxes low…or let the Democrats in Washington raise taxes.” These are dog days for conservative Republican incumbents. The growing din of civil war in Iraq drowns out the president’s tough talk about the war on terror. The Mark Foley page scandal puts a damper on the conservative indictment of licentious liberals. Stagnant wages and growing pressures on working and middle-income families make the president’s celebration of the “strong economy” sound out of touch. So the president and conservative incumbents are trotting out the old staple—the threat that Democrats will raise your taxes. There are limits to the argument. With fighting escalating in Afghanistan and Iraq, with deficits still consuming the Social Security trust fund surplus and more, the president doesn’t promise new tax cuts. He doesn’t really say what he’ll do for the economy, but merely what he’s against: Democrats raising your taxes. He doesn’t explain how Democrats will do that when he's armed with veto power in the White House. This is the best the conservatives can do. By large margins, Americans say they think Democrats will do better on health care, on education, on jobs and the economy. But tax increases are an understandable concern for families struggling to get by. |