Last week, Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist (R) took election-year pandering — and attempted bribery — to new depths by unveiling a plan to give most Americans a $100 “rebate check” to help pay for a couple of tanks of gas. Even by Frist’s low standards, this was just embarrassing.
Apparently, this was a common opinion, but not for the obvious reasons. Dems disparaged the idea because it’s dumb, but Republicans disapproved because Frist planned to pay for the rebates through a series of tax measures imposed on the oil industry. Under pressure, Frist backed down yesterday — not from the rebate checks, but from the funding source.
Senate Republicans on Monday hurriedly abandoned a broad tax proposal opposed by the oil industry and business leaders, another sign of their struggle to come up with an acceptable political and legislative answer to high gasoline prices.
Senator Bill Frist of Tennessee, the majority leader, said he had decided to jettison the provision, which would have generated billions of dollars by changing the way businesses treat inventories for tax purposes…. The retreat came after a torrent of objections from business leaders and their advocates, who typically view Republicans in Congress as allies. They said they had been blindsided by the inclusion of the proposal as a central element of the Republican leadership’s energy package late last week.
Frist had suggested eliminating a tax provision called “Last In, First Out” (or LIFO), which helps Big Oil cut their tax liability. The oil industry said it needed the accounting provision, so Republicans vowed to keep it in place. It’s reassuring to know that congressional Republicans will drop modest tax increases like a hot potato, no matter how big Exxon Mobil’s profits are, just as soon as those lobbyists start working the phones.
But according to news accounts, the rebate checks are still on the table. How would Frist pay for it? It’s a funny story….
The Wall Street Journal reported:
Amy Call, a spokeswoman for Mr. Frist, said the $100 rebates would cost $15 billion. Now senators will “look for other options” to make up the lost revenue, Ms. Call said, adding that they also might simply move the bill without any additions, meaning the increased spending will add to the deficit.
It’s an amusing series of events. Frist came up with a bad idea (rebate checks) to be paid for by a good idea (higher taxes from the oil industry). Under pressure, Frist dropped the good idea but kept the bad one. Asked how he’d pay for the bad idea, Frist responded the same way all Republicans in DC do to the question: he’d put it on the national charge card and let future generations worry about it.
Perfect. Frist, for several days, toyed with the nation of a fiscally responsible approach to a bad public policy. When push came to shove, it’s the fiscal responsibility that had to go.