Quickly. What do these 27 Louisianans have in common, other than having been elected to political office?
- Paul Hollis
- John Alario
- Jack Donahue
- Gerald Long
- Fred Mills
- Barrow Peacock
- John Smith
- Steve Carter
- Greg Cromer
- Cameron Henry
- Dorothy Hill
- Valarie Hodges
- Sam Jones
- Dee Richard
- Alan Seabaugh
- Scott Simon
- John Schroder
- Kirk Talbot
- Conrad Appel
- Barry Milligan
- Jeff Landry
- John Kennedy
- Bill Cassidy
- Clay Higgins
- Steve Scalise
- Ralph Abraham
- Mike Johnson
Give up?
Well, to make it more interesting, I’ll throw in these names:
- Jeff Sessions
- Tommy Tuberville
- Tom Cotton
- Mike Huckabee
- Devin Nunes
- Kevin McCarthy
- Marco Rubio
- Matt Gaetz
- Ron Desantis
- Rick Scott
- Doug Collins
- David Perdue
- Brian Kemp
- Mitch McConnell
- Rand Paul
- Cindy Hyde-Smith
- Michael Guest
- Tate Reeves
- Roy Blunt
- Ben Sasse
- Christopher Sununu
- Chris Christie
- Chris Collins
- Jim Jordan
- Rick Santorum
- Pat Toomey
- Lindsey Graham
- Tim Scott
- Kristi Noem
- Lamar Alexander
- John Cornyn
- Ted Cruz
- Mitt Romney
- Liz Cheney
Each of the aforementioned is among the 172 members of the U.S. House of Representative, 48 U.S. senators 12 governors and 27 Louisianans who signed Grover Norquist’s no-new-tax pledge, which reads simply enough:
I, ______, pledge to the taxpayers of the ______ district of the state of ______ and to the American people that I will: One, oppose any and all efforts to increase the marginal income tax rates for individuals and/or businesses; and Two, to oppose any net reduction or elimination of deductions and credits, unless matched dollar for dollar by further reducing tax rates
Of the 20 Louisiana legislators who signed the pledge, seven are still in office. They are Hollis, Mills, Peacock, Henry, Hodges, Seabaugh and Schroder. Schroder is no longer in the legislature, having moved up to State Treasurer.
Landry, a former member of the U.S. House, is now Louisiana’s attorney general with an eye on the governor’s office just up the street. Kennedy and Cassidy, of course are Louisiana’s two U.S. senators while Higgins, Scalise, Abraham and Johnson are in the House. Abraham, an unsuccessful candidate for governor last year, is a lame duck and will exit Congress next Jan. 20.
Norquist, who founded the organization Americans for Tax Reform (ATR) wears his capitalist idealism on his sleeve. He’s been widely quoted saying thing like:
“Our goal is to shrink government to the size where we can drown it in a bathtub.”
He advocates standing on one’s own two feet:
“We want to reduce the number of people depending on government so there is more autonomy and more free citizens.”
Norquist feels that such reliance on government weakens one’s character:
“The welfare state creates its own victim/client constituency. By making individuals free and independent, we reduce the need for ‘charity’ to those truly needy citizens what we can certainly afford to help through real charity.”
Moreover, he is convinced that government spending, fueled by entitlements, is harmful to the U.S. economy:
“What’s hurting the U.S. economy is total government spending. The deficit is an indicator that the government is spending so much money that it can’t even get around to stealing all of the money that it wants to spend.”
The COVID-19 pandemic shutdown unquestionably crippled the US—the world—economy, necessitating Congress to pass a $350 billion paycheck protection bill to bail out companies with forgivable SBA loans of up to $10 million which, of course, caused Norquist to pitch a hissy fit even before another $330 billion was added to the relief package. He wrote a letter urging lawmakers not to approve a second stimulus bill, saying:
“Government spending is inhibiting the fast recovery we want in jobs and incomes, not stimulating it.”
But what Norquist neglected to point out is his Americans for Tax Reform had just received up to $350,000 in stimulus money from the first bill. In other words, he got his and now he doesn’t want anyone else to get theirs because it’s wasteful government spending, it kills incentive, creating victimhood.
Oops. Maybe all those members of congress, legislators, and governors listed above might like to reconsider signing off on Norquist’s “Don’t do as I do, do as I say do” pledge..
Perhaps Norquist should “funnel” that guvmint money to the CHOCTAW INDIANS of Mississippi, the tribe he helped Karl Rove, Tom DeLay, Ralph Reed and JACK ABRAMOFF funnel more than $1 million away from the Choctaw back in 1999.
Of course, when it came time to put up or shut up, Norquist chose to shut up by REFUSING TO TESTIFY before the Senate Indian Affairs Committee’s hearing on lobbying abuses.
But perhaps the best illustration with the fewest words to describe Norquist’s role in the sordid affairs with Abramoff, DeLay, Reed, and Rove can be seen HERE. If all this doesn’t leave you needing a shower, I just don’t know what could.
Unless it’s this:
Others that received PPP funding included the Ayn Rand Institute (between $350,000 and $1 million), Fox News host Tucker Carlson’s The Daily Caller ($350,000 to $1 million), Newsmax, the conservative TV network owned by Trump ally Christopher Ruddy ($2 million to $5 million), and (wait for it), the shipping business owned by Secretary of Transportation Elaine Chao’s family ($350 to $1 million). Chao just happens to be the wife of (ahem) Senate majority leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky. They’re all right HERE.
(Ayn Rand, for those who may not know, was a Russian émigré who fled the communist revolution, became an actress in the US and who wrote The Fountainhead and Atlas Shrugged. Atlas Shrugged has become something of a capitalism bible to her followers.)
To borrow from Charles Dickens, we seem to have the ghosts of capitalism past and the ghosts of capitalism present in one tidy little story. I can’t wait for the ghost of capitalism future to make its appearance.
But I would be remiss if I didn’t include one last Norquist quote because it’s really a gem:
“Hypocrisy is the tribute that vice pays to virtue.”
I sent an email to both Cassidy and Kennedy asking them if they or their family members received money from the Covid relief package that was meant for small businesses. Just a one-liner question. I don’t know if they did or didn’t receive money, but I asked. I have not received a reply back yet.
The cut-and-paste their bots send you should be instructive. Please post whatever you get. I recently got an email from Kennedy’s bot responding to something I didn’t write about – needless to say, the bot assured me JNK is on top of it. What a joke, huh?
It is sickening and downright disgusting to see the hypocrisy of the political and media classes receiving these funds when many Americans will be starving and homeless in a few months unless additional relief is forthcoming. How far can $2400.00 go for a family over a four month or greater period of time if the breadwinners jobs don’t exist (perhaps the Carlson’s or the Chao/McConnels got the sustaining funds instead). That the Ayn Ryan even applied to participate is obscene.
This pandemic demonstrates what our leaders actually want for their constituents, followers and supporters: as little as possible while they reap benefits they don’t (or may not) need.
Thanks, Tom, for another truly eye opening piece
I personally think both hindsight and foresight are 20/0 for these people. The only thing they care about is which way the political wind blows.
I waded thru a comprehensive list of those who received these funds in a local municipality and was amazed at who got what. Why do churches, CPAs, lawyers need this and many got the highest amounts (1m-2m)? It is truly an eye-opening read and very good for this to be made public. The Shreveport Times has a link.