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Martin Gottlieb: Jim Jordan jumps to fore with right-of-right pitch | A Matter of Opinion
 

Home > Blogs > A Matter of Opinion > Archives > 2011 > January > 25 > Entry

Martin Gottlieb: Jim Jordan jumps to fore with right-of-right pitch

Meet Jim Jordan.

If you already follow Ohio politics a lot, you already know the name. He’s the congressman from Urbana — north of Springfield — and points north and east. His 4th District extends to Mansfield, and is mainly rural and conservative.

He was a four-time state champion high school wrestler, a two-time national champion for Wisconsin, then an assistant coach at Ohio State.

He got his political start running for the state House of Representatives, then moved up to the state Senate. His basic approach has been to out-conservative everybody, which isn’t easy in Republican primaries in his various districts.

He recently declined to attend a national conservative conference in part because an organization of gay conservatives was going to be there.

He’s been considering a run for the U.S. Senate in 2012 against Democrat Sherrod Brown. But he said in December that he is “leaning heavily” against it.

Looks like he has a pretty good gig in Congress, for a guy who’s only beginning his third term. He has a lock on his district, and he is the chair of Republican Study Committee (RSC), to which two-thirds of his colleagues belong.

Using that spot, he has now made his first big splash on the national scene, winning attention from the media, the White House and others by getting to the right of House Speaker John Boehner and top Republican budget guy, Paul Ryan, of Wisconsin.

The RSC proposed cutting federal spending by about a third for most domestic agencies. During the recent campaign, top Republican leaders talked of getting $100 billion out of the budget this year. But with much of the year past, they have prorated that to about $60 billion. For the RSC, though, there’s no prorating. And this year is just the beginning.

The RSC decided not to ponder the possibility of cuts in defense, homeland security, veterans spending, Social Security and Medicare. And, of course, it excluded all talk of tax increases as a way of addressing the main problem it cites: runaway debt.

The targets are only in “discretionary domestic” spending, about a fifth of the budget.

That makes it sound like the conservatives are simply targeting stuff that conservatives don’t like. But the White House was quick to say the plan would result in a loss of 4,000 FBI agents, 1,500 drug enforcement agents, 900 U.S. marshals and 5,700 correctional officers, as well as 3,000 food inspectors. And almost 400,000 children would lose Head Start spots.

The RSC focused on dollar figures, not impact. According to Congressional Quarterly Today, Jordan said at a news conference that the proposed cuts “were derived by talking to members of the RSC, asking them: Where do you think government has been wasteful, redundant.”

Wouldn’t such dramatic cuts undercut the effort to stimulate the economy to produce some jobs?

Said Jordan, “We actually think, if you reduce federal government spending, you help create jobs.”

That, of course, is a widely held view among conservatives. But typically it’s about the long term, not the short.

The Associated Press asked Jordan what accounted for his optimism about the impact of cuts.

“His office said it’s not aware of studies directly addressing the issue,” AP said.

The Washington Post reported the RSC proposal as the “first sign of a fissure between old-guard Republicans and Tea-Party-backed newcomers.”

Maybe. Almost half the Jordan group are freshmen, many of them with Tea Party ties.

But Boehner is getting a chance to look like a relative moderate, while the newcomers get on the record harmlessly, given that whatever budget is actually enacted seems likely to be a lot more moderate.

Meanwhile, Jordan has laid down a marker with some relevance for Ohio politics.

He said, “I have never seen the American people more ready tor the tough-love solutions. The question today is whether the political class will rise to the level the American people set” in the 2010 election.

Being associated with the marker could make him a bigger player in the House.

But if he really thinks he’s where the people are, one might think he would like the idea of taking on staunch liberal Sherrod Brown in this swing state.

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