Modern
Republicans are very, very conservative; you might even (if you were Mitt
Romney) say, severely conservative. Political scientists who use Congressional
votes to measure such things find that the current G.O.P. majority is the most
conservative since 1879, which is as far back as their estimates go.
And what
these severe conservatives hate, above all, is reliance on government programs.
Rick Santorum declares that President Obama is getting America hooked
on “the narcotic of dependency.” Mr. Romney warns that government programs
“foster passivity and sloth.” Representative Paul Ryan, the chairman of the
House Budget Committee, requires that staffers read Ayn Rand’s “Atlas
Shrugged,” in which heroic capitalists struggle against the “moochers” trying
to steal their totally deserved wealth, a struggle the heroes win by
withdrawing their productive effort and giving interminable speeches.
Many readers of The Times were, therefore, surprised to learn, from an excellent article published last weekend that the regions ofAmerica most
hooked on Mr. Santorum’s narcotic — the regions in which government programs
account for the largest share of personal income — are precisely the regions
electing those severe conservatives. Wasn’t Red America supposed to be the land
of traditional values, where people don’t eat Thai food and don’t rely on
handouts?
Many readers of The Times were, therefore, surprised to learn, from an excellent article published last weekend that the regions of
The article made its case with maps showing the distribution of dependency, but you get the same story from a more formal comparison. Aaron Carroll of
Now,
there’s no mystery about red-state reliance on government programs. These
states are relatively poor, which means both that people have fewer sources of
income other than safety-net programs and that more of them qualify for
“means-tested” programs such as Medicaid.
By the way,
the same logic explains why there has been a jump in dependency since 2008.
Contrary to what Mr. Santorum and Mr. Romney suggest, Mr. Obama has not
radically expanded the safety net. Rather, the dire state of the economy has
reduced incomes and made more people eligible for benefits, especially
unemployment benefits. Basically, the safety net is the same, but more people
are falling into it.
But why do
regions that rely on the safety net elect politicians who want to tear it down?
I’ve seen three main explanations.
First,
there is Thomas Frank’s thesis in his book “What’s the Matter With Kansas?”:
working-class Americans are induced to vote against their own interests by the
G.O.P.’s exploitation of social issues. And it’s true that, for example,
Americans who regularly attend church are much more likely to vote Republican,
at any given level of income, than those who don’t.
Still, as Columbia University ’s Andrew Gelman points out,
the really striking red-blue voting divide is among the affluent: High-income
residents of red states are overwhelmingly Republican; high-income residents of
blue states only mildly more Republican than their poorer neighbors. Like Mr.
Frank, Mr. Gelman invokes social issues, but in the opposite direction.
Affluent voters in the Northeast tend to be social liberals who would benefit
from tax cuts but are repelled by things like the G.O.P.’s war on
contraception.
Finally, Cornell University ’s Suzanne Mettler points out
that many beneficiaries of government programs seem confused about their own
place in the system. She tells us that 44 percent of Social Security
recipients, 43 percent of those receiving unemployment benefits, and 40 percent
of those on Medicare say that they “have not used a government program.”
Presumably,
then, voters imagine that pledges to slash government spending mean cutting
programs for the idle poor, not things they themselves count on. And this is a
confusion politicians deliberately encourage. For example, when Mr. Romney
responded to the new Obama budget, he condemned Mr. Obama for not taking on
entitlement spending — and, in the very next breath, attacked him for cutting
Medicare.
The truth,
of course, is that the vast bulk of entitlement spending goes to the elderly,
the disabled, and working families, so any significant cuts would have to fall
largely on people who believe that they don’t use any government program.
The message
I take from all this is that pundits who describe America as a fundamentally
conservative country are wrong. Yes, voters sent some severe conservatives to Washington . But those
voters would be both shocked and angry if such politicians actually imposed
their small-government agenda.
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