Timothy Carney

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New Chamber index shows conservatives aren't corporate pawns

By: Timothy P. Carney
Examiner Columnist
April 3, 2009

Sen. Jim DeMint, R-S.C., had the most conservative voting record in 2008 according to the American Conservative Union (ACU), and was a “taxpayer hero” according to the National Taxpayer’s Union (NTU), but the U.S. Chamber of Commerce says his 2008 record was less pro-business than Barack Obama, Joe Biden, and Hillary Clinton.

Similarly, Texas libertarian GOPer Rep. Ron Paul—the most steadfast congressional opponent of regulation, taxation, and any sort of government intervention in business—scored lower than 90% of Democrats last year on the Chamber’s scorecard.
Liberal Democrats often accuse conservative Republicans of being pawns for Big Business, but the 2008 scorecard for the U.S. Chamber of Commerce—the largest lobbying organization in the country and the official Washington voice of business—provides convincing evidence to the contrary. In fact, the policy agenda of big business can be very different from that of limited-government conservatives and libertarians.
Four Republican senators failed to earn the Chamber’s “Spirit of Enterprise Award” (earned for scoring 70% or above): DeMint, James Inhofe of Oklahoma, Jon Kyl of Arizona, and Jeff Sessions of Alabama.
These are among the most fiscally conservative, pro-limited government members of the upper chamber—which is precisely their error, in the eyes of the Chamber. The heroes of the small government cause are the goats of the big business cause.
DeMint, for instance, picked up the highest score last year from NTU, and Kyl and Inhofe were close behind—all three winning NTU’s “Taxpayer Friend” awards.
Similarly, DeMint picked up the only perfect Senate score from ACU, while Kyl and Inhofe tied for second with 96%.
With which votes did these GOP lawmakers earn Chamber scorn? Kyl, Inhofe, DeMint, and Sessions were four of the eight senators to vote Nay July 31 on the “College Opportunity and Affordability Act,” creating $34 million in new subsidies for colleges, probably driving up tuition at taxpayers’ expense rather than making college more affordable.
These four also voted against the Chamber’s position by opposing President George W. Bush’s February 2008 stimulus bill that sent checks to taxpayers. The “rebates” were one-time tax credits that excluded higher-income earners but included some people with no income tax liability.
Conservatives instead proposed long-term, broad-based tax cuts—for example, making permanent the 2001 tax cuts set to expire in 2011—as opposed to one-time stunts turning the IRS into a welfare agency.
And, of course, DeMint, Inhofe, and Sessions upset the Chamber by voting against the massive $700 billion Wall Street bailout—which has since grown into a Detroit bailout, and a tool which the Obama administration is using to tell banks and carmakers how to run their businesses.
The Great Wall Street Bailout will prove someday to be the crucial victory for government control over the economy, and for voting Nay on a rushed vote to pass this unprecedented measure, some conservative lawmakers were scorned by the business lobby.
Sessions, Inhofe, and Kyl also voted last April against a package of tax deductions for “renewable energy”—effectively corporate welfare for unprofitable technologies.
On the House side, it’s a similar picture. The Republican with the lowest Chamber score was Paul. Even Rep. Barney Frank, D-MA, who wants to regulate everything except Fannie Mae, scored 14 points higher than Paul on the Chamber’s scorecard.
Eleven House Republicans failed to win the Chamber’s award—a mixture of libertarian/conservative members like Paul and liberal members like then-Rep. Wayne Gilchrest, R-MD.
All but Gilchrest in this group of “business unfriendly” Republicans earned a black mark from the Chamber for voting against the Wall Street bailout twice. And conservative Republicans Paul, Ted Poe of Texas, Jeff Flake of Arizona, Jack Kingston of Georgia, Paul Broun of Georgia, and Jim Sensenbrenner of Wisconsin voted against the college aid bill, while seven of the 11 voted against Bush’s stimulus.
In June, the House overwhelmingly passed a bill drafted by the Chamber in coordination with advocates for the disabled that expanded the definition of “disability.” At the time, the conservative Heritage Foundation wrote, “the House bill is supported by some business lobbies (representing mostly larger corporations), it is small businesses that are likely to suffer disproportionately.”
Two other House votes that pit conservatives against the Chamber: An authorization bill for NASA, outspending the Bush administration’s funding request by 15%,, and a bill to beef up copyright enforcement and create a copyright czar.
Advocates of bigger government like to assail their opponents as pawns of big business. The Chamber’s shunning of DeMint and Paul will hopefully help put that lie to rest.
Timothy P. Carney is The Washington Examiner's Lobbying Editor. His K Street column appears on Wednesdays. 
 


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Clarissa Dalloway

Apr 3, 2009

Very interesting. Now, if only Kyl, Paul, Inohofe, DeMint, and Sessions were *true* anti-big-government libertarians -- i.e., they were as dedicated to keeping the government out of our reproductive lives and marriages as they are about keeping the government out of our pockets and businesses. Then maybe we would start to see some interesting coalitions form between the left and the right to oppose big business's stranglehold on DC.

 

Dunrobin

Apr 6, 2009

This analysis helps explain why I stopped supporting the Chamber of Commerce several years ago. It didn't take me very long to realize that most of the members were very much in favor of "public-private partnerships" (as we are apparently calling Fascism these days.)

 

Mike

Apr 6, 2009

This might be the funniest article I've read all year. I thought I was reading Pravda.

 

Crazy_Redneck

Apr 6, 2009

"keeping the government out of our reproductive lives and marriages" LOL! By all means, breed...just accept the consequences of your actions. Wait...you mean abortion? Hmmm.... 5th Amendment: "No person...be deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law;" From an online legal dictionary, definition of "person": "person n. 1) a human being. 2) a corporation treated as having the rights and obligations of a person. Counties and cities can be treated as a person in the same manner as a corporation. However, corporations, counties and cities cannot have the emotions of humans such as malice, and therefore are not liable for punitive damages. (See: party, corporation)" How can you kill a person (a human being) which an unborn child is, without due process of law? Ah...yes, of course...circumvent the constitution.

 

David Thompson

Apr 6, 2009

This article just proves we are living in a fascist state. The government will decide who will profit and who will not. The Chamber does not understand how free markets work. The future looks bleak. Ron Paul is the only free market person in Congress.

 

Samuel

Apr 6, 2009

More conservative than Ron Paul? There is no one more a "taxpayers friend" than Ron Paul. Geez, how stupid can the Chamber of commerce be?

 

Nick

Apr 6, 2009

A very telling article. You're a bigot who doesn't care about the poor if you don't support welfare and anti-business if you don't support corporate welfare. Notice they didn't care all that much about regulation, because that actually helps the biggest corporations bar entry. Sorry Dems. Ron Paul = Hero, Statesman, and Scholar

 

Nick

Apr 6, 2009

A very telling article. You're a bigot who doesn't care about the poor if you don't support welfare and anti-business if you don't support corporate welfare. Notice they didn't care all that much about regulation, because that actually helps the biggest corporations bar entry. Sorry Dems. Ron Paul = Hero, Statesman, and Scholar

 

DavidR

Apr 6, 2009

Thanks for the info. I am withdrawing my membership from the Chamber after reading this. We see where their priorities lay. Support whoever is in office, and get your way. The lobbyists aren't stupid. Ron Paul is my President-and can prove it with a real birth certificate.

 

bilejones

Apr 6, 2009

This is the proof, if it was needed, that the economic system of the the U.S. is that nasty marriage of corporatism and government known as fascism.

 

Doug

Apr 6, 2009

What a joke this report is. Of course, the sheeples in this country will believe every word.

 

Mike

Apr 7, 2009

The reason why Paul was shunned is because he's anti-establishment. The Chamber of Commerce's little ruse here is tantamount to a grammar-school popularity contest by awarding pretty blue ribbons to the favored school children.

 

aaron

Apr 7, 2009

What do you mean *true*? Ron Paul says the people of respective states should decide their own social laws, not the Federal government. The corporatocratic stranglehold comes from the Federal government, not states.

 

Smitty

Apr 7, 2009

Be honest, the "Chamber of Commerce" doesn't represent most American businessmen but is really an agent of the state that advocates state policies such as mass immigration and Socialism. As a small businessman myself the last thing I want is more competition from from other employers with heavily subsidized illegal immigrants or layers upon layers of state regulation.

 

Trude

Apr 7, 2009

Mildly interesting article. When the local CoC voted for a bureaucrat as its President, I gave up on them. The Left has infiltrated all our organizations with the blessing of its ignorant members.

 

Ken

Apr 9, 2009

Problem with the Chambers study is that they base it upon how much government can interfere in private business as opposed to getting out of their way. Supporting fascist laws that subsidize business is not pro business.

 

Jay hutt

Apr 15, 2009

good for Senator Ron Paul hes a good straightforward person. and the most honest man in Congress in the words of Chuck Norris. I never heard of those other congressmen. but good for them too. any organization that smears Ron Paul is a questionable organization that probably works for bankers and wallstreet fat cats who want to keep the status-quo

 


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