Joe Scarborough is one feisty guy.
For loyal fans (and loyal enemies) of his energetic MSNBC show,
"Scarborough
Country," my characterizing Joe as "feisty" comes as no real
surprise. But trust me, fellow viewers: If you haven't heard Joe
talk about runaway federal spending in person, then you have no
idea just how feisty and gutsy he can be.
Recently, I had the pleasure of hosting Joe for a Heritage
Foundation lecture on his new book, "
Rome Wasn't Burnt in a Day." I expected Joe to be bold when
discussing the wild spending by congressional Republicans during
the last 10 years - but I didn't expect him to rock the House. But
rock the House (the Republican-controlled House) he did. This
former Republican congressman took his own party to task in a
manner that proves he cares more for America than he does for
"politics as usual."
But then again, Joe proved that long ago.
In "Rome Wasn't Burnt in a Day," Joe recounts a great story
about one of his first town-hall meetings as a member of the House
of Representatives.
He had returned to his North Florida district to hear from his
constituents, and most greeted him as a conquering hero.
"Congressman Joe," as he was known, had come to Washington with
the class of 1994. He'd never held elective office, and the closest
he'd come to involvement in politics was trying to unseat "The
Machine," the fraternity-and-sorority-controlled cabal that ran the
student government at the University of Alabama.
Joe was part of the young upstarts on Capitol Hill who were
going to abolish the departments of Education, Energy and Commerce.
They were going to pay as they went, balance the budget, end
government waste and curb the influence of lobbyists on public
policy. On their first day in the House, the Class of '94 and the
dynamic new speaker, Newt Gingrich of Georgia, voted to require
that Congress live by the laws it passed for others. They passed
legislation that cut the number of committees, their staffs and
their budgets by a third, and the speaker slapped term limits on
committee chairmen.
They had President Clinton - and, truthfully, all of Washington
- on the run. Within five months, President Clinton would stun his
own party by declaring in his State of the Union address that the
"era of big government is over" and hold a press conference in
which he really and truly said, "I would remind you, the
Constitution gives me relevance. The president is relevant
here."
At Joe's town-hall meeting, one constituent happened to get
control of the microphone and declared, "There ain't a dime's worth
of difference between Republicans and Democrats," the man said.
"Your boy Newt's no different than Bill Clinton."
Scarborough went off. "It's great that you cared enough to come
to our town-hall meeting," he said. "But why don't you read a
newspaper before you come to the next one?"
He followed with a barrage: Republicans pass balanced-budget
amendments, cut taxes and make Congress live by the rules it passes
for others, he said. Democrats fight to keep the inefficient,
expensive status quo, to regulate everything in sight, to enact the
largest tax hike in American history.
Ten years later, Scarborough says, "I think I owe my grumpy
former constituent an apology." Republicans and Democrats alike, he
now writes, seem interested in two things: "wasting your money and
consolidating their power."
It is with Republicans in charge on both ends of Pennsylvania
Avenue, he acknowledges ruefully, that America has gone from a $155
billion surplus to a $455 billion - and counting - deficit in three
years. It is with Republicans in charge on both ends of
Pennsylvania Avenue, he charges (citing data from
the Heritage Foundation) that Americans now pay more per year
for their government than they have at any time since World War
II.
Since the GOP took over Congress in 1995, Joe points out, the
departments of Justice and Education have more than doubled
spending, and Commerce (82 percent), Health and Human Services (81
percent), State (80 percent), Transportation (65 percent) and
Housing and Urban Development (59 percent) all have enjoyed
substantial increases.
A lot of Republicans won't like Scarborough's book - it's a trip
to the woodshed for the party he hoped would change America when he
ran for Congress. And since nothing less than a presidential
election is just a few weeks away, a few folks probably will be
angry with me, too - simply for telling the truth. Please note: Joe
is clear, and so am I, that Congress wants even more spending, even
higher taxes and even bigger government.
But true conservatives must acknowledge that, on some key
questions, far too many of those "in charge" have lost their
way.
It's time for grassroots conservatives to take a tip from
"Feisty Joe" and start demanding more from our leaders.
Rebecca Hagelin is a vice president of
the Heritage
Foundation.