Tuesday, April 25, 2017

Pew Poll Clearly Illustrates America Heading For Socialism At Break Neck Speed. A Sad Commentary!

FAIL: Poll Shows MORE Americans Now Want Bigger Government With More Services In Trump Era

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On Monday, Pew released a poll demonstrating that most Americans now want
 a bigger government with more services rather than a smaller government with
fewer services. The poll, as reported by Allahpundit at Hot Air, shows
 that Americans now want more spending on programs ranging from veterans
benefits and services to infrastructure, from Medicare to health care, from
 defense to environmental protection, from Social Security to assistance to
 the needy. Public opinion on every single aspect of government spending
 has shifted in the direction of bigger government since February 2013.
What happened?
Trump.
As Allahpundit points out:
In 2013, just 28 percent of GOPers supported increased spending on roads and infrastructure versus 21 percent who wanted less spending on those things. Today the share of Republicans who support increased spending has nearly doubled to 55 percent, just six points behind Democrats.
Indeed, the great move in the polls comes not from Democrats but from
Republicans, who now seem willing to embrace big government because
President Obama isn’t in charge. That reflects poorly on Republicans, who
maintained through the Tea Party that smaller government was an issue of
 principle, not convenience.
Was it? There are two possible answers. First, that Republicans weren’t
all that concerned with spending until Obama arrived on the scene, and they
 don’t care about it now that he’s gone; second, that Republicans have
 internalized the Democratic talking point that they can’t win without
 spending big dollars on particular interest groups.
Either way, smaller government comes out the loser.
And this isn’t Trump’s fault – it’s the fault of Republicans who supported his
program. Trump, despite his promises to cut regulations and fight waste,
fraud, and abuse, campaigned as a big government anti-immigration
 protectionist. He vowed to increase spending in every area but foreign
aid and environmental protection. His most ardent followers knew that he
was promising them the help of big government, and they embraced it.
 Trump spent the campaign guaranteeing that he wouldn’t touch the great
 drivers of America’s debt, entitlement programs – in fact, he said he
 wanted to expand them.
This is the difference between George W. Bush and Trump. Bush, too, blew
out spending. But much of his base opposed him for doing so. Not so with
Trump: he has made the case that he needs to spend in order to win the
votes of those in swing states, and many Republicans have signed on.
They’re doing so either out of hypocrisy or out of the pure political
calculation that the day of small government is done, so we might as well
have a Republican running a massive government. In either case, that’s a
 bleak denouement for a movement built on the back of Ronald Reagan’s
 foundational belief that government is the problem.

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