How Democracies Panic
Yuval Levin · January 19, 2018 We are living in an era of political panic. Some of President Donald Trump’s most enthusiastic supporters in 2016 were motivated to overlook his shortcomings by desperate fear that our system of government was near death and only the most extreme measures could save it. A poll conducted by PRRI and…
How Conservatives Should Approach Infrastructure Spending
Yuval Levin · January 11, 2017 A big federal investment in infrastructure is one of the few things that Donald Trump has specifically said he wants to pursue early in his presidency. It is not as high a priority for most congressional Republicans, to put it mildly.
Infrastructure Dangers Ahead
Yuval Levin · January 6, 2017 A big federal investment in infrastructure is one of the few things that Donald Trump has specifically said he wants to pursue early in his presidency. It is not as high a priority for most congressional Republicans, to put it mildly.
Apathy in the Executive
Gerard Alexander · December 2, 2016 On the night in November 2010 that a wave of protest enabled Republicans to capture an additional 63 seats in the House of Representatives and decisively retake the majority, incoming House speaker John Boehner warned Barack Obama that the public had sent a message to “change course." Boehner…
Be Prepared
Yuval Levin · March 9, 2015
Getting There
Yuval Levin · September 22, 2014 Obamacare—or at least the version of it that the president and his advisers currently think they can get away with putting into place—has been upending arrangements and reshuffling the deck in the health system since the beginning of the year. That’s when the new insurance rules, subsidies, and…
The Obamacare Opportunity
Yuval Levin · May 5, 2014 Obamacare’s defenders are doing their best to sustain a triumphant mood these days. In the wake of the late-March surge in exchange enrollment, many proponents of the law have insisted it can no longer be rolled back. As the president put it in his April 1 Mission Accomplished speech announcing the…
Done Being Born
Yuval Levin · January 27, 2014 Although he has, in most respects, been gone from the scene for the better part of a decade, Ariel Sharon’s death this month has nonetheless hit Israel hard. His military career was among the most exemplary in a nation that has seen far more than its share of great warriors. And by the end of his…
Unwinding Obamacare
Yuval Levin · January 27, 2014 Obamacare is no longer a theoretical proposition. It is now being implemented, if with some notable exceptions for the portions of the law the Obama administration finds particularly inconvenient. Millions of Americans are experiencing its consequences directly, and millions more are forming their…
Updating Reagan
Yuval Levin · September 30, 2013 Republicans these days are eager to replay the Reagan revolution. It is not hard to see why: In the 1980s, the GOP was the party of ideas, and the vision that Ronald Reagan and his supporters brought to Washington proved immensely popular with voters and profoundly improved American life. But in…
Going, Going, Gone
Yuval Levin · September 2, 2013 In the continuing debate over Obamacare, both the law’s champions and its critics are now focused largely on the mechanics of implementation. This is understandable. The insurance exchanges are supposed to launch October 1, most of the law’s other major provisions take effect January 1, and every…
The Soft Underbelly of Obamacare
Yuval Levin · August 12, 2013 For opponents of Obamacare, it almost seems like the law offers too many targets to choose from. Its effects on premiums and costs look to be highly unpopular, its perverse incentives are already harming employment, its state exchanges will hand out costly subsidies without the necessary checks…
Grand Old Opportunity
Yuval Levin · April 1, 2013
Small Ball
Yuval Levin · January 14, 2013 For fiscal hawks of all political stripes, the last two years have been awfully frustrating. Budget politics has been front and center almost constantly, yet we have made almost no progress toward reducing our deficits and debt.
In Praise of Half Measures
Yuval Levin · December 3, 2012
The Real Debate
Yuval Levin · October 8, 2012
Medicare Jujitsu
Yuval Levin · August 27, 2012 In the wake of Mitt Romney’s selection of Paul Ryan as his running mate, conservatives and liberals seemed almost equally happy. To the right, the pick represented a bold decision to make a forthright case against President Obama’s vision for the country and to champion solutions to the problems…
More Mediscare
Yuval Levin · August 20, 2012 The oddly convenient academic study has long been a weapon in the Democratic party’s arsenal of election-season demagoguery. Do you need to say that conservative policies would sink the republic? Here’s a paper by scholars from a respected university, published in a respected journal, and released…
Our Age of Anxiety
Yuval Levin · May 28, 2012 There is something very strange about the 2012 presidential race so far. The election comes at a time of extraordinary public unease, which clearly demands some response from the political system, and especially from the men running for the highest office in the land. But the two presidential…
A Tale of Two Budgets
Yuval Levin · April 2, 2012
Mind the Gap
Yuval Levin · March 19, 2012 Charles Murray’s profound and important new book has, for the most part, been received as merely the latest volley in the inequality debates. Its champions have tended to praise it for shedding light on overlooked aspects of the gap between rich and poor, while its critics have faulted it for…
In Praise of the House
Yuval Levin · January 2, 2012 On the night Republicans won control of the House of Representatives in November 2010, John Boehner laid out the new Congress’s key priorities: to restrain the growth of government, cut spending, reform how Congress works, and end the uncertainty in the economy to help get Americans back to work.…
Grand Old Reform Party
Yuval Levin · December 5, 2011 In 2010, Republicans won control of the House by offering to resist the Obama agenda. But their victory left open the question of whether they would also confront the grave fiscal challenges facing the country, and move beyond mere opposition to present an alternative governing vision to that of…
Liberals Playing to Type
Yuval Levin · November 21, 2011 In April 2008, days after saying that voters in western Pennsylvania were inclined to cling to religion and guns out of bitterness, Senator Barack Obama sat down for an interview with the editorial board of the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette to try to fix some of the damage his remark had done to his…
The Medicare Monster
Yuval Levin · September 26, 2011
‘We Don’t Estimate Speeches’
Yuval Levin · July 4, 2011 On June 22, the Congressional Budget Office released its annual “Long-Term Budget Outlook.” To call the document grim would be a grave understatement. It describes a massive wave of debt that threatens very soon to drown us—and that, thanks to the weak economy and the continuing growth of spending,…
Beyond Mediscare
Yuval Levin · May 30, 2011 Do House Republicans want to kill the elderly? If you listen to the left these days, you’d certainly think so. Last week, a liberal advocacy group called “The Agenda Project”—which claims to advance “rational, effective ideas in the public debate”—released an ad showing a look-alike of House Budget…
Fight to the Debt
Yuval Levin · May 23, 2011 Normally in Washington, the agenda for spring and summer is set by the president’s budget and the priorities of congressional leaders. But this year will be different. House Republicans have proposed an ambitious platform, in the form of the budget produced by House Budget Committee chairman Paul…
The Radical Gradualism of Paul Ryan
Yuval Levin · April 18, 2011 Late last month, Senator Charles Schumer of New York led a conference call in which Senate Democrats briefed reporters about the ongoing budget battle. At the outset, unaware that his comments were already audible to reporters on the line, Schumer provided some marching orders, advising his…
The Central Front
Yuval Levin · April 4, 2011 Even as they engage in heated battles over the budget and try to define a new agenda from their perch in the House of Representatives, conservatives clearly understand that the key to turning things around—to averting a debt crisis and defending the ideal of limited government—is winning the…
Overruling Obamacare
Yuval Levin · December 27, 2010 In October 2009, at one of her weekly press conferences, Nancy Pelosi was asked by a reporter “where specifically does the Constitution grant Congress the authority to enact an individual health insurance mandate?” Pelosi shook her head and replied: “Are you serious?” When her spokesman Nadeam…
Change We Can Believe In
Yuval Levin · November 29, 2010 Technically speaking, the National Commission on Fiscal Responsibility and Reform seems headed toward failure. The commission, chaired by Democrat Erskine Bowles and Republican Alan Simpson, is required to produce a report by December 1 providing recommendations for reducing the deficit and debt.…
Hold the Balloons
Yuval Levin · November 15, 2010 On November 7, 2006, the Democrats marked their takeover of Congress with a raucous celebration at the Hyatt Regency hotel on Capitol Hill. Balloons and confetti fell from the ceiling as the party’s leaders stood on the stage arm-in-arm, beaming with joy. “Tonight is a great victory for the…
Repeal—Now More than Ever
Yuval Levin · November 8, 2010
The War on the Young
Yuval Levin · October 11, 2010 Last week, in an effort to limit the damage to congressional Democrats in November’s elections, President Obama set out in pursuit of the youth vote, traveling to several college campuses to rally the young activists who were so important to his presidential campaign. “What I want to do is just to…
First, Stop Obama’s Madness
Yuval Levin · September 20, 2010 Democrats in Washington, confronting a mammoth tidal wave of angry voters as November approaches, are desperate to change the subject. They know there is little they can say about themselves or their record of governing over the past two years that would not worsen their prospects, so they…
REPEAL
Yuval Levin · April 5, 2010
The Anti-Jobs Bill
Yuval Levin · March 22, 2010
The Summit of Folly
Yuval Levin · March 1, 2010
After Obamacare
Yuval Levin · February 1, 2010 For the past week, liberals have been trying to persuade themselves that Republican Scott Brown’s victory in the Massachusetts Senate race need not mean the end of Obamacare. But that is exactly what it means. The Democrats’ health care agenda, in anything like the form it has taken for the past…
A Fine Mess
Yuval Levin · January 4, 2010 In the Democrats' rush to pass some kind of health care legislation before public opposition overwhelms them, tactics have long since overtaken substance. Their only remaining goal is to pass a bill, any bill. As the endgame has unfolded, all eyes have been fixed on the unseemly process taking…
From Awful to Worse
Yuval Levin · December 21, 2009
He's No Stupak
Yuval Levin · December 19, 2009 In a radio interview on Thursday, Nebraska Senator Ben Nelson boasted that, compared to some of his colleagues, he was a "cheap date," holding out as he was as a matter of principle and not for some outlandish dropping of federal largesse in Nebraska.
Same Old Obamacare
Yuval Levin · October 12, 2009 After a summer of setbacks on health care reform, Democrats on Capitol Hill again seem to think they have found a formula for success. The latest iteration of Obamacare, emerging this week from the Senate Finance Committee, is said to be a move to the center, avoiding the albatross of a government…
Real Health Reform
Yuval Levin · August 17, 2009 This has been a most unhappy summer for liberal health care reformers. As recently as May, Senate Finance Committee chairman Max Baucus could exclaim to the Washington Post, "The train is leaving the station. There's a sense of inevitability here." Yet as members of Congress begin their August…
Obamacare: It's Even Worse Than You Think
Yuval Levin · August 3, 2009 President Obama's strategy to pass sweeping health care legislation rested on stealth and speed. The idea was to fill the conversation for months on end with vague talk about expanding coverage, "bending the cost-curve," improving quality, and rooting out waste, without showing the public how the…
Dare to Defeat ObamaCare
William Kristol · June 22, 2009 As long as the health care reform plan envisioned by the Obama administration and congressional Democrats was just a series of slogans, it was easy for the left to build support for it and difficult for the right to imagine how it could be stopped. It is hard, after all, to object to vague promises…
Stop ObamaCare
Yuval Levin · May 18, 2009 President Obama and the Democratic leaders of Congress have made it clear that health care reform is their top legislative priority this year. The administration laid down some general markers in its budget, and the president has enunciated principles in several speeches. Key committees in both…
The Anti-Stimulus Plan
Yuval Levin · March 16, 2009 Last September, during the first presidential debate between Barack Obama and John McCain, moderator Jim Lehrer asked Obama what the growing economic crisis would mean for his policy ambitions: "What are you going to have to give up, in terms of the priorities that you would bring as president of…
Transitional Lincoln
Yuval Levin · October 27, 2008 Lincoln at Peoria
The Cabinet of Dr. Obama
Yuval Levin · October 20, 2008 Over the past few weeks, in a series of television ads, in stump speeches, and in the presidential and vice presidential debates, the Obama campaign has sought mightily to attack John McCain's proposal for health care reform. It's vehemence and tenacity have been striking, especially given how…
Marketing 101
Ramesh Ponnuru · July 7, 2008 JOHN MCCAIN'S CAMPAIGN has begun to roll out his newly repackaged economic program, and the early headlines have been all about federal spending. "McCain Reverts to Balanced Budget Pledge," the New York Times reported, and the quote most often pulled out of McCain's remarks had to do with his "stem…
A Theme for McCain's Pudding
Yuval Levin · May 26, 2008 In recent weeks, while the penultimate chapter of the Democratic nomination race has monopolized our attention, John McCain has engaged in a series of auditions of general election themes for his campaign. In early April, he set out on a "Service to America Tour," highlighting key points of his…
Conservative Populism
Ramesh Ponnuru · January 28, 2008 Anxious lower middle class families are shaping up to be the crucial political constituency of this year's election. Polls show that financial security is their biggest concern. They worry about health and education costs, about retirement, and about their prospects for getting ahead. Their…
Two Aspirin and Call Us in 2008
Yuval Levin · October 1, 2007 The 2008 presidential campaign has seen the Democrats more outspoken on health care than they have been since the early 1990s. The three frontrunners have produced health care proposals that would greatly increase the role of the government in funding and managing the nation's health insurance…
To Be Continued
Yuval Levin · February 26, 2007 Amidst the clang and symbolism of the new Democratic Congress's first month, between the hundred-hour marathon and the posturing about Iraq, a peculiar thing has happened. In a matter of a few weeks, with only minor controversy and little fanfare, a 2007 federal budget has taken shape that includes…
Political Science on the Hill
Yuval Levin · January 22, 2007 "It is scandalous that eight years have passed since we have known about stem cell research and the potential to conquer all known maladies, and federal funds have not been available for the research," Pennsylvania senator Arlen Specter told a press conference last week. Specter's comment marks a…
The Health of the States
Yuval Levin · December 18, 2006 In early 2006, Massachusetts governor Mitt Romney gained national attention by negotiating a plan with the Democratic state legislature to pursue universal health insurance coverage in his state.
Putting Parents First
Yuval Levin · December 4, 2006 We are beginning to get used to national security elections in America. The 2006 election cycle was the third in a row focused almost exclusively on the war on terror and Iraq. Apart from immigration and the vague odor of corruption, it is hard to find a single domestic issue that candidates…