[Politech] Grover Norquist's star fading among limited-government conservatives

From: Declan McCullagh (declan@private)
Date: Tue Mar 23 2004 - 21:47:07 PST

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    [As discussed here a few weeks ago. --Declan]
    
    
    
    http://www.thehill.com/news/032404/norquist.aspx
    
    Tax hawks cooling to Norquist
    By Alexander Bolton
    
    Influential conservatives from an array of anti-tax groups are publicly
    criticizing Grover Norquist, considered President Bush’s most prominent
    liaison to the conservative grassroots, for being too close to the White
    House.
    
    While acknowledging Nor-quist’s contribution to the fight to cut the
    size of government as head of Americans for Tax Reform, they question
    whether he can continue as an effective leader of the conservative movement.
    
    The critics cite his decision not to oppose the $395 billion Medicare
    bill Bush signed into law last year, the cost of which has since swelled
    to an estimated $521 billion.
    
    They also point to Norquist’s past support of federal rules that would
    force telephone companies to share with competitors their access to
    homes, which nearly all free-market advocates oppose.
    
    Conservatives also were outraged by the decision of Norquist’s group to
    give Sen. Arlen Specter (R-Pa.) a “Hero of the Taxpayer Award” in the
    midst of his fierce primary battle with conservative challenger, Rep.
    Pat Toomey.
    
    “Everybody in the taxpayer movement read that and thought it was the
    stupidest thing they had ever seen,” said David Keating, executive
    director of the Club for Growth, one of the largest conservative
    political fundraising groups in the country. “It’s a real embarrassment
    for Americans for Tax Reform.”
    
    ...
    
    But Edward Crane, president of the Cato Institute, called the award
    “utterly inexcusable” and said it was ridiculous for the tax group not
    to take a position on the Medicare bill.
    
    “It’s purely doing the bidding of the White House,” said Crane. “Anyone
    with any principles for limited government would say throwing a massive
    new entitlement on top of a bankrupt Medicare program is ridiculous.”
    
    ...
    
    
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