Indentured
Families Social conservatives and the GOP: Can this marriage be saved?
by Allan
Carlson
03/27/2006,
Volume 011, Issue 26
IN THE INTERNAL
POLITICS OF the Republican coalition, some members are consistently more equal
than others. In particular, where the interests of the proverbial "Sam's Club
Republicans" collide with the interests of the great banks, the Sam's Club set
might as well pile into the family car and go home.
Consider, to
take one recent instance, the Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and Consumer
Protection Act, enacted last year, after a long delay, with support from
congressional Republicans. A controversial clause that would have prevented
abortion protesters from filing for bankruptcy to avoid paying court-ordered
fines had stalled the measure. After the Senate rejected this provision, GOP
leaders drove the bill through both houses of Congress and gained an
enthusiastic signature from President George W. Bush.
In a nutshell,
the new law makes a "clean start" after filing for bankruptcy much more
difficult for families with at least one wage earner. Instead, most affected
households will find themselves essentially indentured to a bank or credit card
bureau, paying off their debt for years to come. "A new form of feudalism," one
critic calls it.
In truth, some
had abused the old law, turning repeated bankruptcy filings into a kind of
circus. A tightening on this side probably made sense. Significantly, though,
the new law made no real changes on the lenders' side, measures that might have
reined in an increasingly predatory credit industry. It is common knowledge, for
example, that credit card companies intentionally urge financially troubled
families to borrow still more money, because they can charge these households
exorbitant interest rates. As one Citibank executive has candidly observed,
"They are the ones who provide most of our profit." Late payment fees, another
favored industry device, reportedly deliver over 30 percent of credit card
financing revenue. Assurances by lawmakers that the new law will bring credit
card interest rates down fly in the face of these more fundamental corporate
strategies.
True, in the
context of America's new debt-driven economy, this treatment of financially
troubled families may constitute "good business" (even if under older ethical
standards it's the equivalent of offering a barrel of whiskey to an alcoholic).
More fundamentally, though, the GOP's opting for an outcome that's good for
Citibank's profits while disregarding the effects on families should cause no
surprise.
SOME HISTORY
may help here. The modern "family issues" are actually about a century old. The
first openly "pro-family" president was a Republican, Theodore Roosevelt.
Between 1900 and about 1912, he wrote and spoke often, and eloquently, about the
dangers of a rising divorce rate and a falling birth rate. He celebrated
motherhood and fatherhood as the most important human tasks, and described the
true marriage as "a partnership of the soul, the spirit and the mind, no less
than of the body." He blasted as "foes of our household" the birth control
movement, equity feminism, eugenics, and liberal Christianity.
However, the
Rough Rider was the only prominent Republican of his time to think and talk this
way. The dominant wing of the GOP tilted in favor of the banks, the great
industries, and--perhaps more surprisingly--the feminist movement. Indeed, as
early as 1904, the National Association of Manufacturers had formed an alliance
with the feminists, for they shared an interest in moving women out of their
homes and into the paid labor market. When the feminists reorganized as the
National Woman's party in 1917, the manufacturers' association apparently
provided secret financial support. More openly, Republican leaders embraced the
feminists' proposed Equal Rights Amendment, first advanced in Congress in 1923.
The GOP was also the first major party to endorse the ERA in its platform.
Meanwhile, the
Democrats consolidated their 19th-century legacy of "Rum, Romanism, and
Rebellion": that is, as the party favoring beer halls, the new immigrants from
Eastern and Southern Europe, southern agrarians, northern Catholics, small
property, the trade unions, and--importantly--the "family wage" for male
workers. This cultural and legal device sought to deliver a single wage to
fathers sufficient to support a wife and children at home. The Democrats also
welcomed the "Maternalists" into their ranks, female activists who--while
believing strongly in equal legal and political rights for women--also
emphasized the natural differences between the sexes when it came to childbirth
and child care. They favored federal programs for the training of girls in home
economics and for "baby saving," meaning efforts to reduce infant and maternal
mortality. They fiercely opposed working mothers and day care. Under this
Maternalist influence, every New Deal domestic program openly assumed or quietly
reinforced the goal of a "family wage" and the model American family of a
breadwinning father, a homemaking mother, and an average of three or four
children.
In short, from
1912 until 1964, the Democrats were--on balance--the pro-family party. The
Republicans, on balance, were the party of business interests and the feminists.
All this
changed between 1964 and 1980 with the emergence of the "Reagan Democrats." This
radical reorientation of American domestic politics began with debate about
adding "sex" to the list of prohibited discriminations under Title VII
(employment issues) of the proposed Civil Rights Act of 1964, a fascinating
event that ended with the addition of "sex" and the ensuing legal destruction of
the "family wage" regime. The broad transformation continued with the rise of
the "pro-family movement" during the 1970s, behind early leaders such as Phyllis
Schlafly and Paul Weyrich. It ended in 1980 with the solid movement of northern
Catholics and southern evangelicals into the Republican party, and the
counter-movement of feminists and the new sexual revolutionaries into the
Democratic fold. Ronald Reagan, a proud four-time voter for Franklin D.
Roosevelt and a lifelong admirer of the New Deal, explained his 1980 victory to
a group of Catholic voters this way:
The secret is
that when the left took over the Democratic party we [former Democrats] took
over the Republican party. We made the Republican party into the party of the
working people, the family, the neighborhood, the defense of freedom. And yes,
the American Flag and the Pledge of Allegiance to One Nation Under God. So,
you see, the party that so many of us grew up with still exists except that
today it's called the Republican party.
In fact, this
was only partly true. For the Republican party as reshaped by Reagan now saw
pro-family social conservatives in political alliance with the interests of the
banks and the large corporations. Main Street and Wall Street were under the
same tent, which was a very new development.
SO, HOW WELL
has the Republican party performed as the party of the traditional family? At
the level of the party platform, it has done fairly well. Since 1980, pro-family
activists have successfully shaped Republican platforms that oppose ratification
of the Equal Rights Amendment, endorse a constitutional amendment to overturn
Roe v. Wade and protect pre-born infant life, and call for pro-family tax
measures.
And there have
been concrete wins. Regarding taxation, for example, the Tax Reform Act of 1986
doubled the value of the child-friendly personal exemption and indexed it to
inflation. Ten years later, another tax bill created a new Child Tax Credit.
George Bush's 2001 tax cut raised this credit to $1,000 per child and began to
eliminate the tax code's notorious marriage penalty.
There have been
other gains. Congress approved and President Bush signed a ban on partial-birth
abortion. The welfare reform of 1996 eliminated perverse incentives to
out-of-wedlock births. Under the current President Bush, the Administration on
Children, Youth, and Families and the Office of Population Affairs, important
branches of the Department of Health and Human Services, are in pro-family
hands. As of last month, so is the State Department's Bureau of Population,
Refugees, and Migration. Judges with pro-family records have won presidential
appointment to federal courts, most recently Samuel Alito. Especially with the
current administration, social conservatives have sometimes felt that they
actually hold a true seat at the table.
Even so, all is
not well within the existing Republican coalition. Indeed, there are other
indicators that the Republican party has done relatively little to help
traditional families, and may in fact be contributing to their new indentured
status. Certainly at the level of net incomes, the one-earner family today is
worse off than it was thirty years ago, when the GOP began to claim the
pro-family banner. Specifically, the median income of married-couple families,
with the wife not in the paid labor force, was $40,100 in 2002, less than it had
been in 1970 ($40,785) when inflation is taken into account. In contrast, the
real earnings of two-income married couple families rose by 35 percent over the
same years (to nearly $73,000). Put another way, families have been able to get
ahead only by becoming "nontraditional" and sending mother to work or forgoing
children altogether. As the Maternalists had warned, eliminating America's
"family wage" system would drive male wages down and severely handicap the
one-income home. So it has happened.
Despite the
economic pressures, though, such families are not extinct. They still form core
social conservative constituencies such as home schooling families and families
with four or more children. But again, they have little to show from the years
of the Republican alliance. Indeed, the GOP has done absolutely nothing to curb
the egalitarian frenzy and the gender-role engineering set off by Title VII of
the Civil Rights Act and Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972 and
enshrined at the Pentagon. Equity feminism still rules these roosts.
Or consider
child care. A timely veto by Richard Nixon stopped the government's day care
juggernaut in 1971, but only for a few months. The same year, Nixon signed a
Republican-designed measure also backed by the National Organization for Women
(heir to the GOP-favored National Woman's party). This law allowed families to
deduct day care costs from their income tax, cleverly labeling them "business
expenses." This has since grown into a credit worth between $1,500 and $2,100 in
reduced taxes for households using day care. Even the wealthiest qualify.
Meanwhile,
families that sacrifice a second income to keep a mother or father at home
receive nothing except a higher net tax. Bills to correct this gross inequity
have been regularly introduced in Congress since 1996, most recently the
Parents' Tax Relief Act of 2006 (H.R. 3080). However, the Republican leadership
has ignored them. To underscore the lost opportunity here, note that
conservatives in Canada rode to victory just a few weeks ago by embracing a plan
to extend that nation's day care benefit to stay-at-home parents; not a whiff of
this, though, in the recent State of the Union address.
Add to these
examples the bankruptcy reform measure discussed earlier, and ask: What do these
issues have in common? All three are matters where the interests of big business
and the interests of traditional, one-breadwinner families have collided, and in
each case the Republican party has sided in the end with business. Concerning
one-income families, the great corporations continue to view them as a waste of
human resources, artificially raising labor costs by holding adults at home.
Judging by its inaction and results, the GOP agrees. For the same reason, large
businesses generally favor federally subsidized day care, for it creates
incentives for mothers to work rather than care for their children. Existing
Republican policy strongly favors this social parenting. And the credit industry
has every interest in creating a new, indentured debtor class annually sending
20 percent of its income to the banks. The Republicans concur.
OTHER
DEBT-DRIVEN FAMILY ISSUES are looming, with little indication of a Republican
willingness to tackle them in a pro-family way. Consider the Federal Student
Loan program, launched in the mid-1960s as a modest supplement to means-tested
federal education grants. The system has since morphed into a massive debt
machine, lending out $58 billion in 2005 alone and fueling a huge increase in
college and university costs. The average bachelor's degree recipient currently
graduates with $20,000 in debt; students having attended graduate school report
another $50,000 to $100,000 in debt, creating in one commentator's words "the
most indebted generation of young Americans ever."
Here we find
another newly indentured class of Americans, also paying about 20 percent of
their incomes to the banks for decades to come. Disturbingly, over 20 percent of
these borrowers report that they have delayed having children because of their
debt, while 15 percent say they have delayed marriage. These are not pro-family
outcomes. The most recent Republican response to the borrowers'
plight--undertaken in early February in the name of fiscal responsibility--was
to pass a measure whose net effect will be to raise the long-term debt facing
young adults.
Another
troubling new issue is Title IV-D of the Social Security Act, the federal
government's child support collection and enforcement program. Originally
designed to track down the welfare fathers of illegitimate children, the measure
has increasingly targeted middle income households affected by divorce. There is
mounting evidence that the system now encourages marital breakup and exacerbates
fatherlessness by creating a winner-take-all game, where the losing
parent--commonly a father wanting to save the marriage--is unfairly penalized by
the loss of his children and by a federally enforced child support obligation.
Here we find objectively false feminist views--the assumption that men are
always the abusers and women are always the victims--driving public policy. And
here we find still another newly indentured class of citizens--noncustodial
parents--being squeezed financially by the state. If you think this an
exaggeration, I refer you to no less an authority than Phyllis Schlafly, who
calls this runaway federal law the most serious danger facing American families
today.
Democrats often
dream of wooing the "Reagan Democrats" back into the fold. Bill Clinton, who
could speak "evangelical" and who embraced pro-family tax and welfare reforms,
succeeded to some degree. Democratic strategist Stanley Greenberg, who actually
coined the phrase "Reagan Democrats," argues that "a new, family-centered
politics can define and revitalize the Democratic party." Its message should
highlight "family integrity and parental responsibility" and offer a
"progressive vision of family support." Greenberg even theorizes that "Roman
Catholics would [again] rally to a Democratic party respectful of family and
committed to defending government's unique role in supporting it."
If the
Democratic party remains the party of the sexual revolution, as its open
yearning for same-sex marriage suggests it may, such dreams will remain just
that. However, if a Democratic leader can ever shake that monkey off his--or
her--back, and if this occurs in conjunction with an economic downturn, the
prospects for another broad political realignment are fairly high. A new
economic populism, delivering child-sensitive benefits and skewering predatory
banks and bureaucrats, could work politically for a clever Democrat.
Moreover, when
push comes to shove, social conservatives remain second class citizens under the
Republican tent. During the 2004 Republican convention, they were virtually
confined to the party's attic, kept off the main stage, treated like slightly
lunatic children. Republican lobbyist Michael Scanlon's infamous candid
comment--"The wackos get their information [from] the Christian right [and]
Christian radio"--suggests a common opinion among the dominant "K Street"
Republicans toward their coalition allies.
Contemporary
Republican leaders need to do better--much better--toward social conservatives.
They must creatively address pressing new family issues centered on debt burden.
And they must learn to say "no" sometimes to Wall Street, lest they squander the
revolutionary political legacy of Ronald Reagan.
Allan Carlson
is president of the Howard Center for Family, Religion, and Society in Rockford,
Illinois.
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2005, News Corporation, Weekly Standard, All Rights Reserved.
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