Graph du jour

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Graph du jour

POSTED: Thursday, February 25, 2010, 7:00 PM
Filed Under: Health Care | News

Keep this in mind if/when you're watching the healthcare summit, and/or the coming budget debates. Conservatives give lip service to cutting costs, lowering taxes, etc.When it comes time to actually choose what to cut, however, the support evaporates (except for "foreign aid," which is an insanely tiny proportion of the federal budget, and "welfare programs").

Conservatives agree that the government spends too much. But ask them what to cut ...

At last weekÂ’s Conservative Political Action Conference, Minnesota Gov. Tim Pawlenty called on the attendees to imitate the wife of Tiger Woods: "We should take a page out of her playbook and take a nine iron and smash the window out of big government in this country."

But thereÂ’s a problem for Pawlenty and the activists who cheered him: Rank-and-file conservatives actually like big government.

In 2008, the American National Election Study asked a national sample whether federal spending on 12 different programs should be increased, decreased or kept about the same.

As the graph above illustrates, the respondents who identified themselves as "conservative" or "extremely conservative" had little appetite for specific spending cuts.

Very few conservatives said they favored reducing (or cutting out altogether) spending on any program. The least popular program proved to be childcare -- with a grand total of 20 percent of conservatives saying theyÂ’d slash it. The most popular is highways; only 6 percent want to cut spending there. Even bugaboos like welfare and foreign aid fare well, attracting the ire of only 15 percent of conservatives. Amazingly, the survey found that, on average, 54 percent of them actually wanted to increase spending.

Posted by Jeffrey Billman @ 7:00 PM  Permalink | Post a comment
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