|
Send to a friend
Some Real Reaching Out
by Sheldon Richman, January 2001
With President George W. Bush having
now taken office, theres a lot of talk about his reaching
out to the opposition. The logic is this: the presidential race was so
close that Bush owes some consideration to the people who voted for Al
Gore. Naturally, that means embracing major parts of the Democrats
legislative agenda.
This is noteworthy for a couple of
reasons. First, much of Bushs campaign was (unfortunately) already
an exercise in reaching out. True, he campaigned for an across-the-board
income tax-rate cut. He also pushed partial privatization of Social Security.
On the other hand, he did not call for a reduction in the federal budget. On
the contrary, he would increase current spending and add billions in new
spending.
One of his costly ideas is to pay for the
prescription drugs for some elderly people, a classic me-too
move, aping the Democrats, but scaling down the program. He also plans to
spend lots of money on public schools. Where Republicans used to say the
federal government has no constitutional role in education and used to call
for abolition of Department of Education, Bush believes there is a huge role
for the feds. He even picked a public-school superintendent as secretary of
education! His form of school meddling will differ from what the Democrats
would do, but it is meddling just the same.
When Bush said he was a uniter,
not a divider, that was a signal that his philosophical differences with
the Democrats are not terribly sharp. Otherwise the statement makes no
sense.
The other interesting aspect of the
reaching out imperative is that Democrats are never
expected to do it. Only advocates of smaller government (or people
perceived to be such) are expected to be seized by the spirit of
reconciliation. To use the unsatisfactory vernacular, people on the right are
supposed to move left. But no one on the left is ever called on to move right.
The Democrats and the dominant news media have rigged the game very
nicely in that regard.
In the spirit of reconciliation, I suggest
that this would be a good time for the avowed peacemakers such as
minority leaders Daschle and Gephart to show their bona fides and
make a real peace offering. I have the perfect gesture for them, and it
concerns an issue that generates much polarization: abortion.
That seems like an unpromising issue
on which to find common ground: either a woman has a right to terminate a
pregnancy or she doesnt. But there is one aspect of this explosive
issue that cries out for agreement by the adversaries: taxpayer funding.
Bush has already made a move on this
issue, but it is hardly adequate. He has stopped tax funding only of
organizations that do abortion counseling abroad. But what about domestic
tax-funded counseling and the funding of abortion by Medicaid?
Surely, whatever position one takes on
abortion, one can agree that it is wrong to force a person to pay for
someone elses abortion. Compelling the financing of what someone
finds immoral is itself immoral. How can anyone who favors freedom of
conscience support tax funding of abortion? Ive never heard a good
answer to that question.
Even if one believes in the right to have
an abortion, it does not follow that there is a right to have it paid for by
someone else. That idea makes a mockery of rights. I have a right to worship
at the religious center of my choice. But surely this cannot mean the
taxpayers should pay for my transportation and other expenses related to
the exercise of that right. It simply means that no one should be permitted
to forcibly impede that exercise. The moment you start forcing people to
shoulder the burden of other peoples rights, you have crossed the
line and have violated the rights of those you have forced.
As to the argument that without tax
funding, poor women would be unable to get abortions, there is an easy
answer. The affluent pro-abortion activists should be perfectly free to raise
voluntary money to assist them.
The most basic mark of civility is
abstaining from using force against people merely because you cannot
persuade them to your point of view. Ending compulsory financing of abortion
would go a long way toward defusing this controversy and restoring civility. It
is something that all people of goodwill should be able to rally round.
Sheldon Richman is senior fellow
at The Future of Freedom Foundation in Fairfax, Va. (www.fff.org), and
editor of
Ideas on Liberty magazine.
Send to a friend
back to top
|