After the United States Supreme Court ruling this past June finally and rightfully overturning “Chevron…
CFIF on Twitter CFIF on YouTube
Why Not Put Students and Taxpayers First?

After the United States Supreme Court ruling this past June finally and rightfully overturning “Chevron Deference,” one might hope that federal agencies and the bureaucrats who populate them in Washington, D.C. would recognize and respect the new limitations on their previous excesses.

The ruling struck a major blow against administrative state overreach.  And while the Court’s decision specifically dealt with agencies’ rulemaking process and the ability to interpret statutes however they like, hopefully it and similar previous rulings will start imposing desperately needed guardrails to prevent rouge agency action.

The Unites States Department of Education (DOE) offers a textbook example of that sort of rogue behavior.   Many cogently contend that the DOE shouldn’t even…[more]

September 11, 2024 • 08:39 PM

Liberty Update

CFIFs latest news, commentary and alerts delivered to your inbox.
Should Voters Feel Joy When Paying the Bills Is Harder Than Ever? Print
By Byron York
Wednesday, August 14 2024
For those families making trade-offs to meet their most basic needs – can joy pay their electric bill? The water bill? The rent? Insurance on the house?

On Wednesday morning, the Bureau of Labor Statistics will release inflation figures for July. Whatever the numbers turn out to be, this will remain true: Prices are far higher than they were when Joe Biden and Kamala Harris took office. 

Even as the rate of inflation has gone down from its peak in 2022, Americans have learned an unhappy lesson. When the rate of inflation goes down, prices still go up. They are building upon all the price increases before but at a somewhat slower rate. Yes, a very few things go down, but at the same time, others keep rising at a high rate. There's no relief.

This week, the Wall Street Journal published a striking portrait of how that affects many American families. The headline was "Child Care, Rent, Insurance: Where Inflation Hits Hardest Now; Big, fixed costs that are tough to avoid are crushing household budgets."

"Price increases for lots of items, like cable and shampoo, are indeed cooling," the Journal reported. "Prices for vehicles, gasoline, TVs and plane tickets have even dropped over the past year. ... But prices for many of the things that are hard to do without are still posting eye-watering increases. Rent and electricity bills are up 10% or more over the past two years, and car insurance costs are up nearly 40%, according to the Labor Department's index. Shoppers might be able to trade down from prime steak to cheaper cuts of meat at the supermarket, but they can't really do the same thing with the water bill."

The article told the story of one family trying to use less electricity, reduce their home insurance coverage and cut back on the kids' sports leagues. Another family stopped eating out and deferred any hope of buying a bigger house after being slammed by soaring daycare costs. 

The burden is not limited to their particular circumstances. "Households across the country are facing similar struggles," the Journal reported. "According to the Labor Department, essential services such as water, sewer and trash collection have jumped nearly 11% over the past two years, and electricity has climbed ten percent."

It's no surprise that 65% of Americans believe the country is headed in the wrong direction, according to the RealClearPolitics average of polls. Harris and Biden took office in a moment of relative optimism for the country, when just 49% of Americans thought the country was on the wrong track. (That's a pretty low number for the last 20 years.) By mid-2022, with inflation raging, 74% felt the country had gone astray  higher than at any point in the Trump presidency. Now, it's 65%.

So, when two-thirds of Americans feel the country is on the wrong track, what theme do Harris and running mate Tim Walz adopt for their presidential campaign? Joy. The Washington Post reported that the two Democrats have "seized on a joyful message." A New York Times analysis of their "joyful campaign" included the headline: "Harris Used to Worry About Laughing. Now Joy Is Fueling Her Campaign." MSNBC declared that Harris and Walz "campaign with joy."

Obviously, Harris and Walz are happy. Why shouldn't they be? Harris quickly, almost instantly, secured the Democratic nomination after party leaders pushed the aged and infirm Biden aside. Walz has a chance for a bigger job than he ever imagined. That can make a politician joyous.

But what about everybody else? For those families making trade-offs to meet their most basic needs  can joy pay their electric bill? The water bill? The rent? Insurance on the house? Kamala Harris will spend the coming weeks trying to persuade those voters to reward her for the dismal circumstances her time in office has brought. She will have many advocates, in the Democratic Party and in the media, cheering her on. But for millions of American voters, the bills are still the bills, and there's nothing joyous about that.


Byron York is chief political correspondent for The Washington Examiner.

COPYRIGHT 2024 BYRON YORK

Notable Quote   
 
"Gov. Chris Sununu, R-N.H., signed a no-excuse voter identification and proof-of-citizenship bill into law last week, but it will not go into effect until six days after this year's election.The law, which passed the state's Republican-majority House and Senate earlier this year, will require New Hampshire voters to provide proof of citizenship to apply for registration, as well as a photo ID when…[more]
 
 
— Breccan Thies, The Federalist
 
Liberty Poll   

Will the televised Harris/Trump debate have a significant, lasting impact on the presidential race, or quickly fade as other issues dominate voting decisions?