from SLATE:
>> What if Romney Wins?
Economic policy would change a lot less than conservatives hope and
liberals fear.

By Matthew Yglesias|Posted Friday, Nov. 2, 2012, at 12:00 PM ET

Would a Democratic Senate help or hinder a President Romney?

Barack Obama’s second-term economic policy is relatively easy to
figure out, because it would mostly involve taking advantage of
changes that are already scheduled to happen.

Understanding what would happen in a Mitt Romney administration is
much more difficult. The starting point is to realize that Romney has
been overpromising and liberals have been overworrying about it. The
fact of the matter is that unless current polling is badly mistaken,
even if Romney wins, Democrats are overwhelmingly likely to hold a
majority in the Senate, meaning swathes of his stated agenda will be
dead on arrival.

Optimistic conservatives and pessimistic liberals have largely avoided
acknowledging this based on a mistaken analogy to the first year of
the George W. Bush presidency. In 2001, Senate Republicans were
extremely aggressive in employing the budget reconciliation process to
overcome potential Democratic filibusters. Combine budget
reconciliation with the fact that any 2013 Democratic Senate majority
would rest on the backs of senators from red states like West
Virginia, South Dakota, and North Carolina and it becomes easy to spin
a story in which a handful of Democratic defectors would create the
legislative majority Romney needs for major economic reform. The
problem is that without a formal majority, the necessary
reconciliation instructions could not pass the Senate in the first
place. A Democratic-controlled Budget Committee would have no interest
in writing them, Majority Leader Harry Reid wouldn’t want to bring
them to the floor, and moderate Democrats wouldn’t vote for it.

In other words, the whole Romney agenda the Obama campaign’s been
warning you about—the $5 trillion in tax cuts, the privatization of
Medicare, the steep cuts to everything from FEMA to Medicaid—isn’t
actually going to happen.

So what would happen?

While hard-right Romney isn’t going to get his way, David Brooks’
fantasy that Moderate Mitt from Massachusetts will reappear doesn’t
add up either. Even if Romney wanted to govern in that way, the House
GOP majority wouldn’t allow it. Indeed, in a perverse way the fact
that he’ll have no way to enact his most far-reaching conservative
policy commitments means he’ll have less reason than ever to back away
from them and break with the party’s base.

One big difference is likely to be on the immediate post-election
question of the fiscal cliff. Going over the fiscal cliff would lend a
re-elected Obama a lot of useful leverage, but it would serve little
purpose for Obama if Romney’s going to take office in January. If
Romney wins, Democrats may be willing to basically give Republicans
what they want on the Bush tax cuts and military spending in the
lame-duck session as long as the GOP is willing to throw them a bone
or two on domestic spending.

A Romney administration would likely give us more forceful federal
measures on housing refinancing. This is a longtime pet issue of
Romney adviser Glenn Hubbard and he recently reiterated his backing of
the idea in an interview with Mike Konczal of the liberal Roosevelt
Institute. The Obama administration has fitfully supported housing
refinancing efforts, but they’ve been stymied by partisan opposition
from Republicans that would likely melt away after Romney’s
inauguration. Meanwhile, we can expect sweeping change on the
regulatory front. A Romney administration would halt moves toward more
stringent air pollution rules, open more federal land to oil and gas
drilling, and withdraw rule interpretations that are friendly to union
organizing. Whether or not Romney formally repeals new Obama-era
financial regulations, he would certainly take an easygoing approach
to actual implementation. Whatever you make of this as policy for the
long-term (I don’t think much of it), the combination of lax
regulations, tax cut extensions, and a housing boost are likely to
brighten the growth outlook for 2013. Toss in the fact that the
Federal Reserve is usually friendlier to growth and less tough on
inflation when Republicans are in office, and things look even better.

One potential fly in the ointment is that Romney might try to follow
through with his campaign promise to launch a trade war with China.
Nobody in Washington on either side seems to think he’s actually
serious about this.

Problems with Romney-era economic policy are likely to start with the
scheduled beginning of Obamacare implementation in 2014. Republicans
won’t have the votes to repeal Obamacare, but Democrats won’t be able
to force Romney to do any of the implementation. The result will be a
chaotic mess, with different states doing different things and
insurance companies, hospitals, and firms with large numbers of
uninsured workers all screaming for clarity. This is the issue where
Romney’s leadership will be most dramatically put to the test. His
official position is that he’ll achieve de facto repeal by broadly
issuing waivers from the law’s requirements, but this is nonsense.
Under current law the president can’t begin issuing these waivers
until 2017. Had congressional Republicans done the sensible thing and
passed a bipartisan proposal from Scott Brown and Ron Wyden to
accelerate the waiver process back when the Obama administration
announced its support in 2011, they’d be in better shape, but they
didn’t.

The question for Romney will be whether he can craft a new version of
this Brown-Wyden compromise. Finding something that conservatives
would count as a win but Democrats don’t view as gutting the law will
be very challenging, but if he makes it stick, it would be a signature
achievement. If not, a huge swathe of the economy will be thrown into
temporary chaos.

And then would come the midterms. The idea right now is that a
Democratic Senate would allow Romney to govern pragmatically without
abandoning his severely conservative policy commitments. But the 2014
Senate map is extremely friendly to Republicans, meaning the final two
years of Romney’s first term might look very different. Pickups in
Alaska, Arkansas, and Louisiana would suffice to give Republicans the
majority and potentially unleash the radical ideas associated with
Paul Ryan’s budget. Add it up, and while a Romney administration would
likely start with a policy whimper, it could easily end with a bang of
controversial policies the public thought had been abandoned years
ago.<<
-- 
Jim Devine / If you're going to support the lesser of two evils, at
the very least you should know the nature of that evil.
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