Newt attempting a political second coming
By CAL THOMAS
After a public flogging that would have delighted the Marquis
de Sade and some private introspection that might please a clergyman,
Newt Gingrich is attempting a political second coming.
The attempted return is propelled by the ideas and optimism
that created the first Republican Congress in 40 years and back-to-back
GOP majorities for the first time in 68 years.
In an interview, Gingrich tells me he's lost 14 pounds and
that he intends to drop 25 more as part of a new regimen of discipline.
He concedes there have been dark moments, perhaps none darker
than the death of his father over the Christmas season and the
bargaining with the House Ethics Committee over how to plead and
how much to pay in fines for an ethics violation. But even in
such moments, Gingrich is able to see himself as a leader with
unique responsibilities.
"I pray before every speech," he tells me. "Publicly,
I'm not a very religious person, but I have a deeply profound
sense of being human, a sinner, not a saint. If I did not have
a profound sense that this is about the survival of freedom and
faith on the planet, and that it mattered, and if I wasn't prepared
to subordinate myself to the best understanding of what God wants
to have happen, I couldn't do this. It's much too hard."
Since the election, Gingrich has been criticized by some conservatives
and those who style themselves as conservatives as being on permanent
retreat. Gingrich tells me he was making plans and that he is
now ready to deliver.
Gingrich promises the following: tax cuts so substantial that
"our goal over a generation should be to lower the tax burden
so that no one in America pays more than 25 percent in total taxes
at all three levels - state, local and federal combined";
either a flat tax (proposed by Majority Leader Dick Armey) or
a sales tax (proposed by House Ways and Means Chairman Bill Archer),
but whichever emerges from the debate, a new revenue collection
system that will eliminate an IRS code that runs 11,000 pages,
and substantially reduce the size and cost of the IRS.
On April 15, Gingrich says two tax bills will come up. One
would make it a criminal offense for an IRS agent to browse through
your personal and confidential tax files without a reason.
The other is a constitutional amendment requiring a two-thirds
vote by Congress for tax increases. At least seven states have
such a requirement in their state constitutions, says Gingrich,
tying the hands of politicians and forcing them to live within
a budget, like real people.
Not only does Gingrich want to see the deficit eliminated by
2002, he also has a plan for wiping out the national debt. He
cites Hong Kong's "rainy day fund" of $19 billion.
Here's how he sees it working in the United States: "Once
the budget is balanced in 2002, the government cannot grow at
a rate faster than 1 percent less than revenues and in about 20
years you pay off the national debt. Then we ought to spend three
years building up the rainy day fund. The equivalent for America
would be $750 billion.
"If you make the shift from our total current interest
payment of $355 billion to earning interest on a $750 billion
rainy day fund, you can give the American people a $400 billion
a year tax cut. That's about $1,500 per person, or $6,000 for
a family of four."
Optimism is contagious and Gingrich hopes others will catch
it.
He sees the failure of unionized, bureaucratized institutions,
citing one newspaper report that only 6 percent of Philadelphia
high school students can read, and adds, "We are winning.
We are a world movement (he notes that a Mongolian leader was
inspired by his 'Contract With America,' printing 350,000 of his
own version and winning the election), it's about ideas, the ideas
are bounded by freedom and faith."
He says that while he's been quiet during the planning phase,
the waiting is over and the action (let's not call it a revolution
this time) is about to resume.
Los Angeles Times Syndicate
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