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FEATURES: Family. Faith. Freedom.
By Adam Meyerson
A manifesto for cultural renewal
The paradox of American politics is that
the country is shifting to cultural conservatism, yet the
American people, and even many conservatives themselves, are
deeply suspicious of the cultural message of conservative
leaders.
This is conservatism's cultural moment. We know from
Ronald Reagan's Cold War victory that conservative ideas work
in national defense and foreign policy. We know from the
resurgence of American capitalism that conservative ideas of
tax limitation and deregulation revitalize the economy. Now
is the time for conservative cultural ideas-marriage,
religion, civil society-to repair the fabric of American
life.
President Clinton has said that "the era of Big
Government is over." He doesn't mean it. His 1998 budget
is full of proposed new federal programs, as well as
expansions of existing programs such as the National
Endowment for the Arts, for which there is no legitimate
federal role. But intellectually the era of Big Government
truly is over. Even most liberals have lost faith that a
large central government in Washington is the answer to the
great cultural crises of our times: the epidemic of child
abuse, more black men in jail or prison than in college, a
public education system that fails to teach 40 percent of
third-graders to read.
The answer to these problems is more individual
responsibility and less government bureaucracy, more social
entrepreneurship and less social engineering. Conservatives
now have the opportunity to usher in a new era of
self-government that relies on strong families, active
religious faith, rejuvenated civic associations, accountable
local governments, a vigorous market economy, and private
charities to help those who fall between the cracks. Even
with the re-election of President Clinton, conservatives are
well positioned to define an agenda for American cultural
renewal.
In his enthusiastic defense of abortion and racial quotas,
the president remains on the cultural Left. But he won
re-election in part because, on many issues, he ran as a
cultural conservative. Most of his conservative speeches and
actions-from calling for more police on the streets, to
signing legislation overturning barriers to transracial
adoption, to embracing the historic welfare reform of
1996-have been "me-too" endorsements of rhetoric
and initiatives long championed by conservatives. The voters
rewarded Clinton for adopting such initiatives; if he values
his popularity in his second term, he will be receptive to
others.
If this is conservatism's cultural moment, however, it is
a moment fraught with uncertainty-even peril. Conservatives
still haven't found the right vocabulary for framing the
cultural debate. They can intimidate almost as often as they
educate. They have not persuaded the overwhelming majority of
Americans to welcome conservative solutions to some of our
most troubling social problems. And they can divide almost as
easily as they unify. No, there is nothing inevitable about
the triumph of conservative ideas and ideals. Liberalism as
an ideology may be in retreat, but it is institutionally
powerful, and obstructers of conservative reform still
dominate the media, the courts, the academy, and the interest
groups sustained by a bloated federal government.
So now, the hard work of persuasion can and must begin. To
set the cultural agenda, and drive home the central
importance of marriage, religion, and civil society in civic
renewal, conservatives face three principal challenges.
The Family. Conservatives have won the argument
about the central importance of making sure that every child
grows up with a mother and father. The next challenge is to
translate this victory into a strategy for reinforcing
marriage in public policy, and for giving parents more
control over the education and upbringing of their children.
Faith. Conservatives are breaking down barriers to
religion in the public square by emphasizing such principles
as religious freedom and religious expression. But they
haven't yet found an effective vocabulary for arguing that
religion should take a more central place in American life.
The next challenge is to encourage greater public
appreciation of the role of religion and religious believers
in healthy societies while affirming a commitment to the
separation of church and state.
Freedom. Conservatives have won the argument about
the importance of private voluntary associations in a free
society. The next challenge is twofold: First, to strengthen
civic institutions without resorting to government subsidies
that create dependency and destroy any sense of mission; and
second, to empower citizens to reassume the primary
responsibility for helping the needy through religious,
charitable, and civic institutions.
Even most liberals have
lost faith that a large
central government is the answer to the
great cultural crisis of our times.
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The language of cultural renewal can reinvigorate a
seemingly rudderless GOP congressional leadership that is
struggling to recapture its momentum. Self-government-through
marriage, religion, and civil society-is the essential
complement to tax relief and fiscal restraint. We can't have
cultural renewal without a smaller central government. And we
can't limit government and provide tax relief without a
vision of freedom and responsibility that will surpass the
welfare state in meeting human needs.
Marriage: In the Driver's Seat
The most effective way for conservatives to talk about
"family values" is to stress the importance of
making sure that every child in America grows up with both a
mother and a father. This lesson is clear and fundamental.
There is no longer any doubt that illegitimacy and divorce
are harmful to children. Social scientific evidence shows
unequivocally that, among whites and black alike, the
collapse of the family is the most important cause of crime,
poverty, academic failure, and personal unhappiness in
America today. The evidence is so overwhelming that liberals
who five years ago mocked Vice President Dan Quayle's
"Murphy Brown" speech now acknowledge, in the words
of President Clinton, that "there were a lot of good
things in [the Murphy Brown] speech. . . . This country would
be better off if more babies were born into two-parent
families. Too many kids are growing up without family
support." Liberals will not necessarily endorse
conservative proposals for putting the family back together,
but they nod in agreement when conservatives describe the
harm caused by the collapse of the family.
Conservatives
sometimes mishandle
the issue of marriage
by becoming
too preachy
or by impugning
the "family values"
of their opponents.
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How were conservatives able to win broad recognition
of the benefits of two-parent families? One reason is that
racial politics has changed. In liberal circles, it used to
be considered racist to talk about the dangers of
illegitimacy. Daniel Patrick Moynihan was ostracized from the
liberal establishment in 1965 when he warned that America's
black communities would be hurt by an out-of-wedlock birth
rate then surpassing 25 percent. Now that black illegitimacy
has reached 70 percent, more and more African-American
political, cultural, and religious leaders are recognizing
that the collapse of the family is devastating their
communities. Now that illegitimacy among whites exceeds 25
percent and is rising rapidly, liberals feel more comfortable
with plain talk about a problem that also affects whites.
Conservatives have also discovered ways to talk about the
family without invidious racial distinctions, such as
pointing out that there is little difference between white
and black criminality when the studies take into account
family structure. Both blacks and whites who grew up with two
parents have low crime rates; both blacks and whites who grew
up in broken homes have high crime rates. Two-parent black
families have two-and-a-half times the median income of white
families headed by single mothers.
Conservatives have used the collapse of the family to
undermine the legitimacy of the federal welfare state.
Proponents justify government anti-poverty programs primarily
in the name of children. But that argument falls in the face
of clear evidence that the huge expansion of federal, state,
and local anti-poverty programs over the last 30 years has
coincided with skyrocketing rates of illegitimacy and divorce
that have devastating effects on children. Conservatives
furthermore have exposed the disastrous incentives of welfare
programs themselves. They have shown how federal welfare
programs discourage both marriage and work and have the
unintended effect of subsidizing and promoting unwed
motherhood. By reducing the penalties for divorce or
nonmarriage, the easy availability of welfare also
discourages mothers and fathers from reconciling their
differences and staying together.
Conservatives are in the driver's seat on this issue.
Liberalism in the last 30 years has sought to diminish
individual responsibility for raising children and to augment
collective ("state") responsibility. This impulse
is summed up best in Hillary Clinton's slogan, "It takes
a village to raise a child," which implies that America
is a national village in which everyone is responsible for
everyone else's children. Conservatives countered effectively
that it really takes a family-mothers and fathers-to raise
children. At the 1996 Democratic Party convention, the First
Lady was forced to backtrack, saying that "parents first
and foremost are responsible for their children," though
she also went on to make the breathtaking assertion that
"it takes a president" to raise a child. It is time
to make her backtrack again. The experience of the last few
years suggests that conservatives will win this argument if
they continue to emphasize that it takes a married mother and
father, not a government, to raise a child.
Conservatives have shown, however, they can occasionally
mishandle this issue by becoming too preachy or
sanctimonious, or by impugning the "family values"
of their opponents. Such approaches usually backfire. On a
subject as close to Americans' hearts as marriage and the
family, it is important for political leaders not to be
self-righteous. Audiences resent a tone of moral superiority.
Moreover, since all political leaders are human-which is to
say, all have character flaws-the self-righteous politician
is likely to be branded a hypocrite when his own shortcomings
are exposed.
A number of leading conservative politicians have obtained
divorces while their children were still minors. This should
not disqualify them from the debates over parental
responsibility; on the contrary, they may be able to add
sensitivity and wisdom learned from the sadness of their own
experience. It does mean, however, that they and their
political allies need to approach debates on parental
responsibility in a spirit of personal humility. Cultural
conservatives run a great risk when they frame a debate over
who has the best and strongest personal commitment to family
life. It is more effective to argue over who has the best
ideas for putting the family back together and for repairing
the fabric of American life.
The next challenge in the "family values" debate
is to explore how public policy can make it more likely that
the overwhelming majority of children grow up with parents
who are married to each other. In certain important areas of
public policy-for example, Social Security payments,
pensions, and the tax treatment of health insurance-the law
already favors marriage. In others, such as income taxes and
welfare, public policy actively discourages marriage. Perhaps
no policies hurt marriage as much as the no-fault divorce
laws currently in place in 49 states; but family law has
been, and ought to remain, the bailiwick of state rather than
federal government. There are nevertheless many areas in
which federal political leaders can make an important
difference in supporting and reinforcing marriage:
Taxes. In the great tax-reform debate to come, a
central question will be whether tax policy should be made to
favor marriage instead of undercutting marriage as it does
today. There are three dominant reform ideas in conservative
discussions about taxation. One is the principle of
neutrality-that government should not use the tax system as
an instrument of social engineering. A second is the
principle of simplicity and fairness-that all income should
be taxed only once and at the same rate. A third is the
principle that tax policy should encourage investment and
growth-for example, through a consumption tax or low marginal
rates on income. All of these principles would remove some of
the current penalties against marriage, but none embodies a
preference for marriage. As conservatives lay the
philosophical and political groundwork for major tax reform
over the next few years, they must decide whether such a
preference should be combined with the other reform
principles.
One of the most significant but seldom mentioned features
of the Armey-Shelby flat-tax proposal is that it ends
marriage penalties for dual-income couples while also making
it easier for married mothers not to work. Under any flat tax
or consumption tax, dual incomes would no longer push married
couples into a higher tax bracket. But perhaps most
significant, the plan's large personal exemption ($10,700 per
parent and $5,000 per child) would reduce the tax burden on
lower-income families and make it much easier for mothers
with children to stay at home. This almost certainly would
make marriage much more attractive for lower-income women.
There is a steep price for generous personal exemptions:
The tax rates are higher than they otherwise would be. But
economic conservatives should be prepared to pay this price,
and to embrace the proposition that it is important to favor
marriage in the tax system, for the sake of building a
broad-based coalition among economic and social conservatives
on behalf of the Armey flat tax or similar tax-reform
proposals. No fundamental tax reform can be achieved without
such a broad-based coalition.
Welfare. The welfare reform of 1996 does not
promote marriage directly or end the subsidization of
illegitimacy. Political leaders may wish to debate how to go
further in reforming welfare not only by removing the
remaining incentives for illegitimacy and divorce in poverty
programs, but also by actually using public assistance to
promote marriage. Should married couples receive preference
in public housing and rent vouchers? Should married couples
warrant a larger Earned Income Tax Credit, or perhaps be its
exclusive recipients? Should men who marry welfare mothers be
allowed to fulfill the mothers' work requirements under the
new welfare legislation? Should welfare authorities give some
sort of dowry to men who take women off welfare by marrying
them? There are downsides to such approaches. They might
encourage greater dependency on welfare among married people,
for example, and might be unfair to mothers who truly have
been deserted or are otherwise unmarried through no fault of
their own. But it would be helpful to start debating what
public assistance can do to favor marriage.
The
Armey-Shelby
flat-tax proposal
ends marriage
penalties for
dual-income couples
while making it easier
for married mothers
not to work.
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Report on the Family. Every year, the
President delivers a few significant reports to Congress, the
most notable being the Economic Report of the President. It
is time to establish an Annual Report to Congress on the
State of the American Family. This would be a comprehensive
report to Congress on the state of marriage, divorce,
abortion, cohabitation, stepfamilies, parental time devoted
to children, and the relationship between family structure
and such indicators as educational attainment, religious
practice, and income. Such a comprehensive report could be
compiled from the large national surveys that the federal
government already undertakes. The extra cost would be small
and could easily be diverted from within other parts of the
overall research budget that Congress allocates to the social
sciences every year.
Sex education. Congress should hold hearings to
explore why sex-education programs in high schools and junior
high schools have failed to reduce teenage out-of-wedlock
pregnancies. Hearings also should be held on private
programs, such as Elayne Bennett's Best Friends and Kathleen
Sullivan's Project Reality, that have outstanding track
records in reducing teen pregnancy by encouraging abstinence
(see "Chastity Programs Shatter Sex-Ed Myths," page
12). Similar hearings also could be held on the bipartisan
National Campaign to Prevent Teen Pregnancy, established
recently in response to a challenge from President Clinton
with the goal of reducing the teen pregnancy rate by
one-third by 2005. One of the most significant features of
the campaign is its acknowledgment that "part of a
strategy for reducing teenage pregnancy should be a more
overt discussion of religion, culture, and public
values."
Homosexuals
are
free to form
their own lasting
unions, but giving
such unions the
special protections
of the law
trivializes marriage.
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Homosexuality. A renewed focus on how public
policy can make it more likely that children will grow up
with both a mother and father gives conservatives a new
vocabulary for talking about homosexuals, a vocabulary that
recognizes their rights as citizens of a free country without
according them special status or approval. Public policy
gives special privileges and protections to marriage because
it is the most important institution for the raising of
children. Homosexuals are free to form their own lasting
unions and to make their own personal commitments to each
other, but it trivializes marriage to give such unions the
special protections of the law or the subsidies that are
intended to help mothers and fathers raise children into
upstanding citizens.
Parental rights. Last November, Colorado voters
defeated an initiative amending the state constitution to
guarantee that "the right of parents to direct the
upbringing and education of their children shall not be
infringed" by government action in, for example, sex
education, school counseling, and medical examinations
without parental consent. In Congress, the Parental Rights
and Responsibilities Act sponsored by Iowa senator Charles
Grassley and Oklahoma congressman Steve Largent would give
parents the right to direct or provide for the education of
their children; make all health or mental-health decisions
for them (with exceptions for imminent harm or
life-threatening conditions); discipline the child, including
reasonable corporal punishment; and direct or provide for the
child's religious and moral formation.
It would be better to enforce these commonsense rules
through local policy and custom rather than through
constitutional provisions that will invite frivolous lawsuits
and judicial intervention. But the grass-roots movement for
such amendments clearly reflects the profound anxieties of
many American parents that they are losing their power to
shape their children's upbringing.
Educational choice. Perhaps no other reform can do
more than educational choice to empower parents in the
upbringing of their children. Although school funding is
primarily a state and local responsibility, federal
legislation can be used as a catalyst to encourage state and
local voucher initiatives. The Watts-Talent Community Renewal
Act, which incorporates the principle of targeted school
vouchers in its strategy for empowerment zones, is an
excellent vehicle for jump-starting voucher movements at the
grass-roots level. Parents and students who have benefited
from vouchers can be brought to testify on Capitol Hill; or
perhaps better yet, congressional hearings can be held in
schools where large numbers of low-income students could
benefit from vouchers.
The teachers and principals in religious and secular
private schools should figure prominently in these media and
publicity strategies. Not only are they eloquent spokesmen
for vouchers, but it is important to make these accomplished
and dedicated teachers and principals heroes in the education
profession. But it is just as important to win friends for
school vouchers among public-school teachers. All good
teachers know how important it is for parents to be involved
more actively in their children's education; it is important
that public-school teachers learn from their private-school
counterparts how parental choice has helped them as teachers.
The unions will fight school vouchers bitterly. Their
opposition will be ferocious, well financed, and well
organized. But teachers and principals need not and should
not be enemies of reform. No education reform worth achieving
can win widespread acceptance without strong support from
many teachers and principals. The next challenge for the
voucher movement is to win such strong support.
Centrality of Religion
One of the great cultural achievements of conservatives in
the last 15 years has been to convince political leaders from
across the ideological spectrum that government ought not
discriminate against religious believers and institutions. By
emphasizing principles that draw the assent of liberals, such
as religious freedom, freedom of expression, and
nondiscrimination, conservatives have been able to build
powerful left-right coalitions to break down barriers to
religion in the public square, including public schools.
The Equal Access Act, which requires public secondary
schools to treat student-initiated and student-led religious
meetings the same as other student gatherings, became law in
1984 after passing both houses of Congress by overwhelming
margins. It passed with the support of such diverse groups as
the American Civil Liberties Union, the American Jewish
Congress, the National Evangelical Association, and the
Christian Legal Society. The law embodies two principles
attractive to liberals: nondiscrimination and freedom of
expression for students. The Religious Freedom Restoration
Act of 1993, also approved by overwhelming bipartisan
majorities in Congress, says that government may interfere
with religious practices only if it can show that the
regulation or action in question furthers a "compelling
governmental interest" and is the least restrictive way
to further that interest.
In 1996, the Clinton administration issued guidelines
suggesting that school curricula make more room for religion
as long as schools teach about religion. The
guidelines also suggested that it is constitutionally
appropriate for students to write or give oral presentations
in the classroom about religious subjects. School districts
are beginning to use the Clinton guidelines to resolve
disputes over religious expression in the classroom.
The "charitable choice" provision of the 1996
welfare reform legislation, which was added by Missouri
senator John Ashcroft, was approved by 67 Senators without
much debate on the Senate floor. The provision is a landmark
in public policy because it insists that government respect
the religious freedom of groups with which it does business.
Religious organizations may receive state contracts for
social services without having to remove their religious
symbols, change their internal governance structure, or
change their hiring practices. Moreover, if states give
contracts for such services to private organizations, they
are required to treat religious and secular organizations
equally.
Faith
commitment
helps create
and sustain the
moral communities
that make
self-government
possible.
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Three safeguards in the charitable-choice provision
helped win the support of those who otherwise might have
objected to the legislation on church-state grounds:
Vouchers. The law prohibits federal expenditures
for religious worship, instruction, or proselytizing unless
aid is given in the form of a voucher that enables a
beneficiary to choose a social-service provider from a range
of religious and nonreligious alternatives. Faith-based
organizations receiving nonvoucherized state welfare
contracts can conduct religious activities only with funds
received from private sources.
Nondiscrimination. Faith-based providers receiving
state contracts may not discriminate against beneficiaries on
the basis of religion, lack of religious belief, or a refusal
to participate in a religious practice.
Nonreligious alternatives. Any beneficiaries who
object to receiving services from a faith-based organization
may ask the state to provide them with services from an
alternative (nonreligious) provider. The charitable-choice
provision in the welfare legislation is a model for public
housing, drug and alcohol rehabilitation, and other areas of
public policy where religious groups have been reluctant to
take government contracts for fear of losing their
distinctive religious mission.
Conservatives have been less successful, however, in
convincing the electorate that religion should play a much
more central role in American life. Few people worry about
private renewal or revival of faith within religious
communities. But many Americans are worried that public
expression of faith by energized, religiously committed
groups and movements will lead to religiously inspired
bigotry, discrimination against religious minorities, and an
accentuation of religious conflict. In many parts of the
country, conservatives will be on the defensive in talking
about religion until they can overcome these widespread
fears.
A revival of religious faith and observance is central to
the conservative vision of American citizenship and
self-government. This notion-that faith commitment helps
create and sustain the moral communities that make
self-government possible-is a theme sounded in nearly every
important proclamation on religion in American life, from
George Washington's Farewell Address to Martin Luther King
Jr.'s evocation of the prophet Isaiah in his "I Have a
Dream" speech. While it is beyond the power of
presidents, legislators, and judges to lead a religious
revival, national political leaders can help encourage
greater respect for religion and religious believers.
They can begin by reminding Americans of their historical
traditions. They can stress the importance of the Great
Awakening in the American Revolution, the religious character
of the anti-slavery and civil-rights movements, the historic
contribution of churches and synagogues to the creation of so
many colleges, hospitals, and charities in the 19th century.
Conservative political leaders can argue that it is
consistent with this tradition for religious leaders to speak
out on great moral issues of the day such as abortion and
homosexuality, and that it is outrageous-indeed
un-American-for anyone to try to stop them from doing so.
On a more practical level, they can point out that
religion offers answers to many of the great social crises of
our times. Government, for example, cannot build and sustain
healthy marriages or teach children to be hard-working,
responsible, and virtuous. The family will be restored not
primarily by public policy, but by private character-building
institutions that touch the souls of men and women and
inspire them to be more responsible husbands, wives, and
parents. This is, above all, the task of religion.
Religion is the great wellspring of charity and
voluntarism. Nearly half of all charitable donations are
given to churches and other religious organizations. Weekly
churchgoers give 3 percent of their income to charity; those
who attend church less than once a month give less than 1
percent. Religious revival dwarfs tax incentives as a means
to encourage more involvement with charity.
It
is vital for
religious conservatives
to proclaim their
commitment to
religious freedom
and the separation of
church and state.
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It is similarly important for conservative leaders
to humanize the Christian Right so it is better understood by
all Americans. Though the Christian Right is frequently
vilified by liberals and the national media, it is one of the
most constructive forces in American culture. In the
tradition of Mormons, Jews, and other religions with a strong
charitable culture, conservative Evangelicals and Catholics
run schools for low-income children. They operate maternity
homes that give unwed mothers the love and support they need
to choose life over abortion. They go into our cities'
meanest streets and rescue gang members, drug dealers,
prisoners, and prostitutes from lives of violence, addiction,
and desperation. Name a social ill afflicting our
cities-poverty, unemployment, illiteracy-and you will find a
religiously affiliated program attacking the problem with
prayer and sweat and a small army of volunteers. Conservative
political leaders can draw public attention to these programs
by regularly visiting and attending services at churches,
synagogues, mosques, and other religious institutions that
are leading the moral revival in their communities.
National political leaders can pray publicly and seek
divine guidance on momentous occasions. In his first official
speech as president after the death of Franklin Roosevelt,
Harry Truman drew from the Bible as he addressed a joint
session of Congress: "At this moment I have in my heart
a prayer. As I have assumed my duties, I humbly pray Almighty
God, in the words of King Solomon, 'Give therefore thy
servant an understanding heart to judge thy people, that I
may discern between good and bad: for who is able to judge
this thy so great a people.' " So long as it is done in
an ecumenical spirit, such public prayer is completely
consistent with religious freedom and American tradition.
Religious conservatives are correct when they criticize
court rulings that threaten and belittle religious expression
in our common culture. The Supreme Court and the lower
federal courts often have used the Establishment Clause of
the First Amendment as a club to browbeat the exercise of
religious freedom, especially in our public schools. Justice
Antonin Scalia has aptly criticized the High Court's
so-called Lemon test-a standard to determine when
government action violates the separation of church and
state-as a "ghoul in a late-night horror movie"
continually "frightening little children and school
attorneys."
The Christian Coalition has said it seeks a constitutional
amendment that "allows voluntary, student, and
citizen-initiated free speech in non-compulsory
settings." This is an important statement, for it is
vital for religious conservatives to proclaim their
commitment to religious freedom and the separation of church
and state. It is important to insist that the powers of
government not be enlisted to proselytize for any faith. And
it is important to be sensitive to the concerns of religious
minorities, especially those with children in public schools.
Just as many conservative Christians want to protect their
children from sex-education classes that contradict their
moral teachings, so members of religious minorities may want
to protect their children from prayers that contradict what
they are taught at home.
Every
congressional district
has success stories
of grass-roots heroes
who already embody
the conservative
alternative
to the welfare state.
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How To Promote Civil Society
When Ohio congressman John Kasich, the chairman of the
House Budget Committee, travels to his district and around
the country, he likes to ask his audiences how many think
they could do a better job than federal bureaucrats in
picking which charities can serve their communities most
effectively. Typically, 299 out of 300 hands go up. This is a
powerful current in public opinion. One of the main
challenges for conservatives is to find ways to give
Americans the tools to make the decisions they are ready and
eager to make.
One approach would be through tax credits for charitable
giving that go beyond the current deduction for those who
itemize gifts to charity. However, tax-credit approaches run
contrary to the objectives of flat-tax proponents and other
conservative tax reformers who are trying to simplify the tax
system. It also is probably best not to limit tax credits to
organizations that are defined specifically as
"poverty-fighting"; some of the most effective
poverty-fighting groups may be churches, Boy Scout troops,
libraries, and other organizations that would fail to qualify
under such a definition. But if there are some serious
problems with the charity tax credit as legislation, it has
great rhetorical advantages. One of the best ways to make the
case for federal spending cuts is to tie those cuts, dollar
for dollar, to tax credits for families. This encourages
families to take more responsibility for the needs in their
community and to find out which charities are the most
effective and the most consistent with their values.
Policymakers in Washington need to find ways to help civic
institutions in their districts without direct government
subsidy. One of the most effective ways to do this is to
identify and overturn federal regulations that are
interfering with their work. For example, the Clinton Labor
Department has made life much more difficult for one of the
most important community institutions in suburban and rural
America: volunteer fire departments and rescue squads.
Prodded by the International Association of Firefighters (an
AFL-CIO affiliate), the Clinton Labor Department has barred
professional firefighters who work elsewhere in their county
of residence from volunteering to protect homes and lives in
their own communities. This restriction not only robs firemen
of the freedom to volunteer their services in their own free
time, but also denies volunteer firehouses some of the best
expertise available to them. The firefighters union so far
has blocked legislation sponsored by Virginia congressman
Herbert Bateman that would overturn this restriction, but if
America's 1.2 million volunteer firemen and rescue workers
(about 80 percent of the total) mobilize behind this change,
conservatives can win this battle against union bullying.
Representative Rob Portman of Ohio has come up with an
innovative way to promote citizen initiatives in his
Cincinnati district. Portman's constituents were upset about
rising drug use among teens, and Portman wanted to address
their concerns without adding to the $13 billion that the
federal government already was spending annually on
drug-control programs. He helped establish the Coalition for
a Drug-Free Greater Cincinnati, bringing community activists
already involved in anti-drug work together with business
leaders, religious leaders, the media, parents, young people,
and law-enforcement officials. As a result of his work, every
leading media outlet in the area is running anti-drug public
service announcements and advertisements; some of the radio
spots were recorded by a popular local rock band. Health-care
providers are offering financial discounts to businesses that
adopt certified drug-free workplace programs. And parents in
every school district are receiving practical training on
steps to keep their children drug free. Portman's anti-drug
work is a new model of constituent service that avoids
pork-barrel spending and is custom-made for the
revitalization of community institutions.
Every congressional district, every rural or metropolitan
area, has success stories of grass-roots heroes who already
embody the conservative alternative to the welfare state.
Members of Congress can visit them, listen to their stories,
discover the principles that led to their success against the
odds, and find out the principal obstacles (including
government regulation) to being even more effective. Such
visits offer two vitally important benefits for conservatives
in Congress.
First, they provide real-life examples that illustrate the
conservative vision of self-government in a caring society
based on personal and community responsibility. If
conservatives are to articulate an alternative to the welfare
state, it is essential to provide examples showing
conservative ideas and principles at work. And for
politicians, nothing is more persuasive than stories from
their own districts or metropolitan areas. Conservative
senators or representatives ought to be able to point to four
or five religious and civic organizations in their districts
or states that are providing care or opportunity for
low-income people without encouraging long-term dependency on
government or private charity. Political leaders can then
explain that many more such organizations are needed if
America is to become again the kind of self-governing
republic that conservatives envision.
Second, conservative members of Congress may learn ways
they can be helpful to grass-roots community organizations,
and thus over time build constituent-service relationships
with low-income communities. The liberal approach to such a
question is to channel taxpayer money to such organizations.
Conservatives can help them garner publicity for efforts to
raise private money, bringing private donors or TV crews
along when they visit effective community groups. They can
hold private fund-raisers. They can even hold congressional
hearings at the sites of effective community organizations.
Congress itself could hold national awards ceremonies to
salute the work done by individual members of civic
institutions. President Bush honored more than 1,000
"Points of Light," one every day, and in many cases
he or a cabinet member visited the institutions honored. He
also invited winners to White House luncheons. In such ways,
President Bush helped stimulate media attention and generate
financial rewards for good works, but his strategy also
encouraged winners to learn from each other.
The Points of Light initiative would have advanced
conservatism better had it been carefully integrated into a
political strategy for providing a conservative alternative
to the welfare state. Bush used his daily Points of Light to
emphasize the importance of community service and buttress
his campaign to reform liability laws. But he made clear that
he did not want his celebration of successful private
programs to be used as an excuse for government not to fund
activities in the same areas. By contrast, the 105th Congress
could use awards ceremonies to credential a new set of
experts: grass-roots problem-solvers with practical
experience. This seems to be the spirit of the "Freedom
Works" awards begun in 1997 by House Majority Leader
Dick Armey.
It is also important to conduct research on and publicize
faith-based, business-based, and other private organizations
that achieve better results at lower costs than government
social programs. Existing research shows clearly that
religious schools teach inner-city children more effectively
at less than half the cost of public schools. Congress can
hold hearings to investigate why. Similarly, legislators can
commission analyses of programs such as Prison Fellowship
that seek to rehabilitate prisoners through religious
conversion, asking how recidivism rates of prisoners in such
programs compare with rates for control groups.
Private
charities
today are dominated
by the same
permissive, value-free
philosophy that
motivates most
public-sector
welfare bureaucrats.
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Meanwhile it is important for conservative
policymakers to engage leading charitable organizations in
friendly debate. Conservatives face a troubling dilemma in
the politics of devolution. They want to return
responsibility for helping the poor from Washington to where
it historically belongs-state and local governments and
private charity-but many of the country's leading charities
insist that the federal government should keep the leading
role. For example, during the debate over welfare reform,
organizations such as Catholic Charities USA, the Salvation
Army, the Young Women's Christian Association, and the
Lutheran Social Ministry strongly opposed the welfare reform
passed by Congress in 1996.
Many leading charities receive as much as two-thirds of
their income from federal, state, and local government
funding. Not only do they resist efforts to reduce federal
spending on programs from which they immediately benefit, but
many think of themselves as part of a political coalition for
a larger federal government and therefore will defend
programs that benefit their partners in this coalition. For
example, leading charities and philanthropies will resist
voucher programs that are opposed by teachers unions and
other public-sector unions.
The professional staffs of many leading charities and
philanthropic foundations have been strongly influenced by
left-liberal ideas such as the bean-counting obsession with
"diversity"; a reluctance to severely punish
criminals; a belief that poverty is unrelated to personal
behavior, and results primarily from discrimination and an
absence of economic opportunity; and an unwillingness to
label such behaviors as unwed motherhood, sexual promiscuity,
and drug abuse as morally wrong. Indeed, most private
charities in America today are dominated by the same
permissive, value-free philosophy that motivates most
public-sector welfare bureaucracies. If private-sector
philanthropies are to play a positive role in America's
future, the ethos of these institutions must be utterly
transformed.
Conservatives also must articulate a principled case
against the seductive lure of government money for
social-service organizations. Initially, this money can
prompt a burst of new energy through larger staffs and more
volunteers. But over time, it becomes addictive. Charities
become less responsive to their clients and more responsive
to bureaucrats and the staff of key congressional
subcommittees. They pay less attention to their mission and
more attention to strengthening the political coalitions that
ensure the preservation of their contracts. And with
contracts come regulations that sap their spirit.
Congressional hearings could reinforce this argument by
asking the officials of charities that do not accept
government money to explain their reluctance to do so.
Not all charities that take government contracts abandon
their missions, but many do. If a charity must take
government money, it is best to keep it to a minimum. It is
even better to funnel public funding to charities through
individual vouchers rather than through direct contracts.
Vouchers empower the people helped by the organization's
services; more important, an agency that does not serve its
clients well will soon be out of business.
Uniting Conservatism
One of the primary challenges for conservatives seeking a
revival of marriage, religion, and civil society is to win
the united support of the conservative movement. Many,
perhaps most, conservatives are nervous about the language
and objectives of cultural conservatism. Cultural
conservatives can overcome these fears and help build a
broader coalition, in the following ways:
Show that the vocabulary of citizenship is an
essential complement to tax reduction and simplification and
other reform objectives of economic conservatives.
We can neither cut taxes nor reduce the deficit unless we
return certain responsibilities now handled by the federal
government to families, businesses, and community
institutions across America. To make the political case for
this reform effort, conservatives must tend to the rebuilding
of families and civil society so that these institutions will
be strong enough-and are perceived by voters as strong
enough-to act on their rightful responsibilities.
Use the vocabulary of cultural conservatism and
self-government in talking about racial justice.
Any strategy for eliminating mandated affirmative action
has to be combined with a strategy for solving the problems
that affect black America disproportionately. The evidence is
mounting that religious and community institutions in black
America are leading the way in solving such problems as
family breakdown, crime, and educational collapse.
Take care not to be too treacly or sentimental, or
to put too much emphasis on increasing charity and volunteer
efforts.
There should be more talk of personal responsibility, less
talk of "compassion." The conservative heart
reaches out to others in need, but the emphasis is always on
building character and helping others so they can help
themselves. And cultural conservatives seeking to revive
civil society must make clear that they don't expect everyone
to join a Rotary Club or volunteer at soup kitchens to solve
society's problems. Self-government, in the conservative
view, begins within the family-taking care of one's own
children, one's own spouse, and one's own aging parents. Good
citizens can responsibly own a business, create wealth, and
produce goods and services that their customers value. The
volunteer at the soup kitchen may in fact do less for the
poor than the fast-food franchise owner who offers job
opportunities and low-cost food so the poor don't have to
rely on charity.
Conservatives
should talk more of
personal responsibility,
and less of
"compassion."
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Speak the language of freedom.
The Founding Fathers gave us a republic where American
citizens had the freedom to make the most important decisions
about how to govern their lives. As conservatives seek to
lead America from the era of Big Government to a new era of
self-government, freedom must be at the core of our vision.
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