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The Washington Times Online Edition

KUDLOW: Jack Kemp’s big ideas

MICHAEL CONNOR/THE WASHINGTON TIMES
POLITICAL PRO: Jack Kemp was a former congressman and pro football player.MICHAEL CONNOR/THE WASHINGTON TIMES POLITICAL PRO: Jack Kemp was a former congressman and pro football player.

COMMENTARY:

When I first visited with Jack Kemp in his congressional office in Washington in the late 1970s, I couldn’t help but notice the row of books on his desk. There was Friedrich Hayek, Ludwig von Mises, Benjamin Anderson and Milton Friedman. And of course, there was Jude Wanniski’s “The Way the World Works.”

Mr. Kemp extracted big ideas from these big books, and he applied them to an American nation that was in big trouble. His detractors called him a jock, just as they called Ronald Reagan a dunce. Yet both men proved their critics wrong.

Working with Mr. Wanniski, Arthur Laffer, Robert Mundell, Alan Reynolds, Steve Entin, Norman Ture and many others, Mr. Kemp developed an agnostic economic formula that solved the vexing problem of economic stagflation and malaise.

Lower tax rates for everyone, he argued. Make it pay after-tax to work, produce, invest and take risks, and the country will get more of all of it. Along with lower marginal tax rates to reignite economic growth, stabilize the free-falling dollar to curb inflation. And add free trade to that mix, since tariffs are nothing more than taxes on the purchase and sale of international goods.

Foster policies that will unleash our God-given creativity and imagination, Mr. Kemp argued. And let individuals take it from there.

Mr. Kemp was always talking about a rising tide to lift all boats, borrowing from John F. Kennedy’s phrase of the early 1960s. In fact, in meetings in the mid-1970s, Mr. Laffer and Mr. Wanniski helped persuade Mr. Kemp to follow in Mr. Kennedy’s footsteps and propose reduced tax rates across the board to get the economy growing again.

Mr. Kemp, an unbelievably energetic activist, then helped persuade Mr. Reagan of the merits of this new policy approach. The economic dons of Cambridge and New Haven scoffed. They wanted to raise taxes, purportedly to curb inflation, and pump up the money supply to expand the economy. Mr. Kemp and his group told the dons they had it exactly backward. He was right. The Ivy League was wrong.

Mr. Kemp actually thought of himself as a bleeding-heart conservative. First and foremost, this son of a truck driver wanted to improve the plight of the nonrich in the inner-city housing projects and those trapped in the dead-end welfarism of the barrios. He worked to expand the economic fortunes and political rights of all minority groups, including the blue-collar workers getting killed by high tax rates and virulent inflation.

A perpetual optimist, he told the Republican Convention in 1996: “You see, democratic capitalism is not just the hope of wealth, but it’s the hope of justice. When we look into the face of poverty, we see the pain, the despair and need of human beings. But above all, in every face of every child, we must see the image of God.” He then added, “I believe the ultimate imperative for growth and opportunity is to advance human dignity.”

Nobody talks like that anymore. Politicians should. It’s inspirational stuff.

Another of his pet projects was the bringing together of capital and labor, workers and investors, and businesses and jobs. His ultimate goal was to make the nonrich rich. To achieve that, he knew Wall Street had to work with Main Street; investors had to work with unions; and high finance had to work with the hard-hit folks in the inner cities. He had a true post-partisan vision long before that phrase became fashionable.

Over the years, Mr. Kemp often called me to affirm and encourage my simple paradigm: You can’t have a good job without a healthy business to create it, and you can’t have a good, healthy business without the investment capital to fund it. It’s a unifying message.

This week, President Obama unleashed yet another attack on international businesses, essentially calling them unpatriotic tax cheats even though they abide by existing laws. Last week, Mr. Obama used his clout to undermine investor-contract laws in the Chrysler LLC bailout. The president has also blasted banks and Wall Street, and has launched a war against capital.

Mr. Kemp knew all this to be wrong. He said we need to stop taxing saving, investment and business two, three and four times. Simplify the tax code, he said. Lower tax rates across the board for everyone. Understand that Hispanics in the barrio need the very capital that is supplied by investors. Without it, there will be no new jobs. And jobs along with economic growth are the best anti-poverty weapons.

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