David Brooks pits the GOP

I resuscitate last month’s thread.

Pretty much. Brook got his groove back on October 30th. In a fit of wishful thinking he lauds Marco Rubio’s policy chops while managing to look away from his actual proposals with this bit of curtaining:
[QUOTE=David Brooks]
At this stage it’s probably not sensible to get too worked up about the details of any candidate’s plans. They are all wildly unaffordable. What matters is how a candidate signals priorities. Rubio talks specifically about targeting policies to boost middle- and lower-middle-class living standards.
[/QUOTE]
Um, no David. Actually policy proposals matter a lot. GWBush ran as a moderate Republican in 2000. Pundits took his dishonest tax proposals with a grain of salt because math is hard and anyway things will be comprised in Congress anyway. This flies in the face of the evidence: in fact, “… presidents usually try to enact the policies they advocate during the campaign.”[sup]1[/sup]

So what does Rubio propose and what does Brooks ignore? Jonathan Chait crunches the numbers. Rubio says that current military spending levels set “ourselves up for danger” and wants to increase the military budget. But let’s say he keeps military spending constant anyway. Rubio proposes a tax cut costing $11.8 trillion over 10 years. 34% of that revenue goes to those in the highest 1% of income. (That’s pretty generous considering that group earns 21% of all income as it is.) By way of comparison, GWBush’s tax cuts cost $3.4 trillion over 10 years. 11.8 >> 3.4.

Rubio wants to pass a balanced budget amendment. That’s nice. Total 10 year revenue under current policies is $41.6 trillion. Subtract out 11.8 and you get $29.8 trillion. Rubio doesn’t want to cut benefits for current or near retirees. At the moment defense, Medicare, Social Security and interest payments on the debt total to $30.7 trillion, with interest payments increasing over the next decade if we emerge from the lost decade.

That leaves nada, nothing at all, for Medicaid, veterans’ health insurance, transportation, border security, and education, justice, the EPA, whatever. This proposal is detached from reality.

So Brooks concludes that, “Of all the candidates, Rubio has done the most to harvest the work of Reform Conservatism, which has been sweeping through the think tank world. In a year in which many candidates are all marketing, Rubio is a balance of marketing and product.”

What utter horsepucky. Marco is more of a flimflam artist than GWBush but alas less of one than Ted Cruz. David Brooks is a hack without any real interest in informing his readership.

From here:

[sup]1[/sup] See Krukones (1984) and Fishel (1985) cited here.