Professor Cornpone,
Ethanol lobbyist Newt Gingrich and us—and the future of the
GOP
The last time these columns were lambasted by a presidential candidate in
Iowa, he was Democrat Richard Gephardt and the year was 1988. The Missouri
populist won the state caucuses in part on the rallying cry that "we've got to
stop listening to the editorial writers and the establishment," especially about
ethanol and trade. Imagine our amusement to find Republican Newt Gingrich
joining such company. WSJ
The former Speaker blew through Des Moines last Tuesday for the Renewable
Fuels Association summit, and his keynote speech to the ethanol lobby was as
pious a tribute to the fuel made from corn and tax dollars as we've ever heard.
Mr. Gingrich explained that "the big-city attacks" on ethanol subsidies are
really attempts to deny prosperity to rural America, adding that "Obviously big
urban newspapers want to kill it because it's working, and you wonder, 'What are
their values?'"
Mr. Gingrich traced the roots of these supposed antipathies to the 1880s, an
observation that he repeatedly tendered "as an historian." The Ph.D. and star
pupil of futurist Alvin Toffler then singled out the Journal's long-held
anti-ethanol views as "just plain flat intellectually wrong."
Mr. Gingrich is right that ethanol poses an intellectual problem, but it has
nothing to do with a culture war between Des Moines and New York City. The real
fight is between the House Republicans now trying to rationalize the federal
fisc and the kind of corporate welfare that President Obama advanced in his
State of the Union. We'll dwell on this problem not merely because Mr. Gingrich
the historian brought it up, but because it and he illustrate so many of the
snares facing the modern GOP.
***
Mr. Gingrich was particularly troubled by our January 22 editorial about food
inflation, "Amber Waves of Ethanol," saying that we "at least ought to use facts
that are accurate." For the record, we cited figures from the Agriculture
Department showing that four of every 10 rows of corn now go to ethanol, up from
about one of 10 a decade ago.
A Gingrich spokesman said that what his boss meant to say is that this
redistribution has a "negligible" effect on global food costs, especially
compared to "higher fuel and energy prices and rampant speculation in the
commodities markets."
Here's how he put in Des Moines, with that special Gingrich nuance: "The
morning that I see the folks who are worried about 'food versus fuel' worry
about the cost of diesel fuel, worry about the cost of commodities on the world
market, worry about the inflation the Federal Reserve is building into our
system, all of which is going to show up as higher prices, worry about the
inefficiencies of big corporations that manufacture and process food
products—the morning they do that, I'll take them seriously."
The morning Mr. Gingrich read the offending editorial, if he did, he must
have overlooked the part about precisely those concerns. He must have also
missed our editorial last month raising the possibility that easy money was
contributing to another asset bubble in the Farm Belt, especially in land
prices. For that matter, he must have missed the dozens of pieces we've run in
recent years critiquing Fed monetary policy.
Of course, the ethanol boom isn't due to the misallocation of resources that
always stalks inflation. It is the result of decades of deliberate industrial
policy, as Mr. Gingrich well knows. In 1998, then Ways and Means Chairman Bill
Archer tried to kill ethanol's subsidies for good, only to land in the wet
cement that Speaker Gingrich had poured.
Yet today this now-mature industry enjoys far more than cash handouts,
including tariffs on foreign competitors and a mandate to buy its product.
Supporters are always inventing new reasons for these dispensations, like carbon
benefits (nonexistent, according to the greens and most scientific evidence) and
replacing foreign oil (imports are up). An historian of Mr. Gingrich's
distinction surely knows all that.
***
Given that Mr. Gingrich aspires to be President, his ethanol lobbying raises
larger questions about his convictions and judgment. The Georgian has been
campaigning in the tea party age as a fierce critic of spending and government,
but his record on that score is, well, mixed.
As Speaker in 1995, he thought he could govern from Congress, refused to
bargain with President Clinton and after a veto was forced to retreat in a way
that hurt Bob Dole and nearly cost the House majority. In 1997, he did manage a
balanced-budget deal with Mr. Clinton, but the price included phony Medicare
cuts on doctors and a new entitlement for children's health care. More
Source
Wednesday, November 9, 2011
Labels:
Ethanol,
GOP IOWA Debate,
Newt Gingrich,
Subsidies,
wall street journal
