1. Politics

    How to Close the Achievement Gap

    How to Close the Achievement Gap

    The achievement gap refers to the gap in educational outcomes between rich and poor kids (and sometimes among white and non-white students). The education reform movement is all about closing that gap. I am skeptical that marginally altering the schooling environment will do much on that front, but we can...

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  2. Economics

    A Trillion Dollar Dilemma

    A Trillion Dollar Dilemma

    Myopic insistence on discussing the symptoms rather than the disease cannot lead to solutions guaranteeing healthy growth in the long term. The public debate is starting to become permanently peculiar. Recently Paul Krugman decided to support the idea of minting a trillion dollar platinum coin, by saying that Barack Obama:...

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  3. War & Peace

    Misplaced Deliberation

    Misplaced Deliberation

    The discussion about the countries which need a political intervention is carefully biased.  President George W. Bush coined the term ‘axis of evil’ in his State of the Union Address on January 29, 2002. He then repeated it numerous times throughout his presidency, using it to describe countries which he...

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  4. Arts

    The Keystone Opposition

    The Keystone Opposition

    Dissecting the effectiveness of the arguments against the pipeline. I think running a campaign against the Keystone pipeline is a good thing. It is a tangible project that climate activists can use to bring attention to the the issue of climate change, attention badly needed. That is, Keystone has great...

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  5. Media

    Media, Government Target French Socialists

    Media, Government Target French Socialists

    Official state policies and official media positions rarely deviate, and a fine example of how deeply in lockstep they have become was published by the Washington Post on Tuesday. It is an absolute must-read: The government of new President Francois Hollande has veered between promises of reform and sometimes fiery...

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  6. Staff Blog

    White House Criticism and Race

    White House Criticism and Race

    Richard Wolffe “struck a racial chord” on MSNBC when he suggested that Republicans appear to exclusively criticize blacks and minorities in the administration. The liberal press, to generalize, has noted the statement as particularly controversial: What you’re seeing here is a war-by-proxy on the president, which is why he said ‘if...

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Of all the nonsense Texas Governor Rick Perry spews about states’ rights and the tenth amendment, his dumbest is the notion that states should go it alone. “We’ve got a great Union,” he said at a Tea Party rally in Austin in April 2009. “There’s absolutely no reason to dissolve it. But if Washington continues to thumb their nose at the American people, you know, who knows what might come out of that.”

The core of his message isn’t outright secession, though. It’s that the locus of governmental action ought to be at the state rather than the federal level. “It is essential to our liberty,” he writes in his book, Fed Up! Our Fight to Save America from Washington,“that we be allowed to live as we see fit through the democratic process at the local and state level.”

Perry doesn’t like the Federal Reserve Board. He hates the Internal Revenue Service even more. Presumably if he had his way taxpayers would pay states rather than the federal government for all the services and transfer payments they get.

This might be a good deal for Texas. According to the most recent data from the Tax Foundation, the citizens of Texas receive only 94 cents from the federal government for every tax dollar they send to Washington.

But it would be a bad deal for most other red states. On average, citizens of states with strong Republican majorities get back more from the federal government than they pay in. Kentucky receives $1.51 from Washington for every dollar its citizens pay in federal taxes. Alabama gets back $1.66. Louisiana receives $1.78. Alaska, $1.84. Mississippi, $2.02. Arizona, $1.19. Idaho, $1.21. South Carolina, $1.35. Oklahoma, $1.36. Arkansas, $1.41. Montana, $1.47, Nebraska, $1.10. Wyoming, $1.11. Kansas, $1.12.

On the other hand, fiscal secession would be a boon to most blue states. The citizens of California – harder hit by the recession than most – receive from Washington only 78 cents for every tax dollar they send to Washington. New Yorkers get back only 79 cents on every tax dollar they send in. Massachusetts, 82 cents. Michigan, 92 cents. Oregon, 98 cents.

In other words, blue states are subsidizing red states. The federal government is like a giant sump pump – pulling dollars out of liberal enclaves like California, New York, Massachusetts, and Oregon  – and sending them to conservative places like Montana, Idaho, Oklahoma, Arizona, Wyoming, Kansas, Nebraska, and the Old South.

As a practical matter, then, Rick Perry’s fight to save America from Washington is really a secret plan to save blue states from red states.

Perry, it turns out, is a closet liberal.

Secretary Reich blogs at www.robertreich.org and his latest book, Aftershock, is now available in paperback.

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