The new Democratic agenda sure looks like government
control over the means of production.
Wall Street Journal
Now
that Donald Trump has criticized the “new calls to adopt socialism in this
country,” Democrats and the media are already protesting that the socialist
label doesn’t apply to them. But what are they afraid of—the label or their own
ideas? The biggest political story of 2019 is that Democrats are embracing
policies that include government control of ever-larger chunks of the private
American economy.
The U.S. may not be Venezuela, but consider the Democratic
agenda that is emerging from Congress and the party’s presidential contenders.
You decide if the proposals meet the definition of socialism.
• Medicare
for All. Bernie Sanders’ plan, which has been endorsed by 16 other
Senators, would replace all private health insurance in the U.S. with a
federally administered single-payer health-care program. Government would
decide what care to deliver, which drugs to pay for, and how much to pay
doctors and hospitals. Private insurance would be banned.
As Senator Kamala Harris put it recently on CNN, “the idea
is that everyone gets access to medical care, and you don’t have to go through
the process of going through an insurance company, having them give you
approval, going through the paperwork, all of the delay that may require. Who
of us has not had that situation, where you’ve got to wait for approval, and
the doctor says, well, I don’t know if your insurance company is going to cover
this? Let’s eliminate all of that. Let’s move on.”
If replacing private insurance with government control isn’t
socialism, what is?
• The
Green New Deal. This idea, endorsed by 40 House Democrats and
several Democratic presidential candidates, would require that the U.S. be
carbon neutral within 10 years. Non-carbon sources provide only 11% of U.S.
energy today, so this would mean a complete remake of American electric power,
transportation and manufacturing.
Oh, and as imagined by Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, all of
this would be planned by a Select Committee For a Green New Deal. Soviet
five-year plans were more modest.
• A
guaranteed government job for all. To assist in this 10-year
transformation of society, the Green New Deal’s authors would “provide all
members of our society, across all regions and all communities, the
opportunity, training and education to be a full and equal participant in the
transition, including through a job guarantee program to assure a living wage
job to every person who wants one.”
This is no longer a fringe idea. The Center for American Progress,
Barack Obama’s think tank, supports a government job for everyone “to counter
the effects of reduced bargaining power, technical change, globalization,” and
presidential candidate Kirsten Gillibrand tweeted her support for it as an
alternative to tax reform.
• A
new system for corporate control. Senator Elizabeth Warren wants a
new federal charter for businesses with more than $1 billion in annual revenue
that would make companies answer to more than shareholders. Employees would
elect 40% of directors, who would be obliged to consider “benefits” beyond
returns to the owners. This radical redesign of corporate governance would give
politicians and their interest groups new influence over private business
decisions and assets.
• Vastly
higher taxes. These ideas would require much more government
revenue, and Democrats are eagerly proposing ways to raise it. Mr. Sanders
wants to raise the top death tax rate to 77%. Ms. Ocasio-Cortez wants a new 70%
tax rate on high incomes, which is supported by the Democratic intelligentsia.
The House Ways and Means Committee is working on a plan to raise the payroll
tax to 14.8% from 12.4% on incomes above $400,000.
Never to be outdone on the left, Ms. Warren wants a new 2%
“wealth tax” on assets above $50 million and 3% above $1 billion, including
assets held abroad. France recently junked its wealth tax because it was so
counterproductive, and such a tax has never been levied in America. This is
government confiscation merely because someone has earned or saved more money
than someone else. Socialism?
These are merely the most prominent proposals. There are
many others, such as Ms. Warren’s plan to set up a government-owned generic
drug maker that would inevitably put private companies out of business because
its cost of capital would be zero.
Some readers might think this is all so extreme it could
never happen. But presidential candidates don’t propose ideas they think will
hurt them politically. The leftward lurch of Democratic voters, especially the
young, means the party could nominate the most left-wing presidential candidate
in U.S. history. If other Democratic candidates oppose any or all of this, we’d
like to hear them.
The American public deserves to have a debate about all
this, lest it sleepwalk into a socialist future it doesn’t want. Credit to Mr.
Trump for teeing it up.
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