October 4, 2013 ****
How Government Shutdowns Help America****

*By* *Ben Voth* <http://www.americanthinker.com/ben_voth/>****

The government shutdown is probably improving the future of the United
States.****

That may seem impossible, given the hyperbole flying about the public
sphere this week as the partial shutdown of the federal government began.
But understanding why the crisis represents real political progress begins
by re-examining the archetypal case study: the 1995 federal government
shutdown. ****

The traditional media memes tell us that President Clinton destroyed
Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich in the classic Democrat-meets-Republican
showdown of government shutdowns. It is upon this template that the Obama
team build their current paradigm of argumentation.****

But what really happened in 1995? A
Gallup<http://www.gallup.com/poll/164714/history-suggests-shutdown-stakes-may-not-high.aspx>set
of surveys illuminates:
****

1. President Clinton's popularity rating went down by 10%, from 52% before
the shutdown to 42% after.****

2. Gingrich's approval went up slightly. You have to read Gallup's fine
print in the survey to actually figure this out.****

3. Congressional approval went up from 30% to 35%. The Congress was
Republican. Realize that today's approval numbers are around 10%.****

President Clinton did go on to win re-election in 1996, with the help of
Ross Perot, though he did not get a majority of the votes. Furthermore,
Clinton won by signaling his compliance with the Republican Congress's
demands for fiscal limits -- in fact, in January of 1996, Clinton famously
declared in his State of the Union
message<http://www.cnn.com/US/9601/budget/01-27/clinton_radio/>that
"the era of big government is over." He was met by thunderous applause
and sustained interruption in a Republican chamber that viewed the moment
as a political signal of defeat for Democrats.****

Clinton's second term was occupied by other distracting matters we will not
discuss here. But his capitulation on "Hillary Care" combined with spending
limits such as welfare reform ushered in one of the most fiscally
productive eras in U.S. budget history. The budget showdown and government
shutdown were huge political factors leading to this change. ****

The media tends to tell us that President Clinton accomplished budget and
economic reform alone and credited this era as a supreme Democratic
achievement. This is laughable and contradicted by the double-chambered
reality of Republicans controlling both the House and Senate during these
periods of time. In fact, it was Clinton's fiscally reckless drive in his
first term that ushered in the first Republican sweep of the House, in
decades, for 1994.****

For those still skeptical that this latest shutdown is good for our
country, keep in mind that President Obama's own budget processes have been
dented by political obstructionism. Federal spending has actually flattened
and 
dropped<http://www.heritage.org/federalbudget/growth-federal-spending-revenue>since
2009, after having skyrocketed in years prior. Spending is still far
too high, but annual revenues to the government have increased by almost
half a trillion dollars -- with our rather anemic economic growth. If you
look at federal spending charts now, you can see that the spending has hit
some sort of invisible ceiling -- call it political obstructionism. Events
like the sequester have backed the federal budget process into a political
corner that prevents spending from growing explosively. The political
process is working.****

The root questions stirring the public today are not unlike those stirring
publics all around the world. From Australia to Egypt, people are rising up
in resistance to a world mired in excessive governance and regulatory
bondage. A variety of recent elections in
Germany<http://www.spiegel.de/international/germany/conservatives-react-to-success-of-merkel-in-german-election-a-923824.html>,
Canada, and 
Australia<http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/world/2013/09/07/australia-election-labor-abbott/2779205/>signal
the change that American media want to deny. Government as a source
of meaning and control is being rejected.****

Clinton advisors are amping up team Obama's confidence that stalemating the
Republicans will serve Democrats well. But all parties should observe that
the media is becoming less monolithic every day, and the potential to
control the narrative is more limited than it was even for Clinton. So it
may be time for pollsters to stop asking, "Whom do you blame for the
government shutdown?" and start asking the better question: "Whom do you
credit?"****

*Ben Voth is an associate professor of communication and director of debate
and speech at Southern Methodist University.*****


*Page Printed from:
http://www.americanthinker.com/articles/../2013/10/how_government_shutdowns_help_america.html
* at October 05, 2013 - 03:10:36 PM CDT****


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