Grover Norquist comes to town

November 19, 2008 at 7:29PM

Grover Norquist's no-room-for-compromise views on taxes have won him passionate fans and just as many passionate critics. On Tuesday, it was clear the hard-charging conservative activist — who once said he wanted to cut government "down to the size where we can drown it in a bathtub" — isn't toning down his rhetoric after an election where Democrats captured the White House and large majorities in Congress.

Norquist still divides the nation into two: his team , which he calls the "Leave Us Alone" coalition, and the "Takings" coalition,'' the vast coalition of leftist politicians, bureaucrats, labor leaders and environmentalists who want to suck evermore taxes out of hardworking, guntoting folks and increasingly intrude in their lives.

The president of Americans for Tax Reform, Norquist was in St. Paul for to speak at CONtacts, a center-right group meets monthly at the St. Paul Central Library. He was clearly intent on rallying conservative troops, boiling down his main point in familiar football terms. "We need to be on offense, not defense.'' He also added his oft-repeated call for "google government" projects, which would enhance transparency in government by posting expenditures on publicly accessible web sites.

Here's Norquist's take on a number of topics:

Why Republicans lost ground this election

Norquist is preaching a variation of the "we weren't conservative enough" theme, adding a strong dose of criticism for the Bush administration. The Republican "brand," he said, relies on two key pillars: promoting itself as the party that doesn't raise taxes and the party that reins in spending. This year, he said, the GOP's brand was particularly hurt in states where some Republicans had voted for tax increases at the federal or state level — something that happened in Minnesota last spring when the so-called Override Six voted to approve a gas tax increase. Norquist also acknowledged that years of escalating deficit spending during the Bush White House hurt the party. The party, he said, needs to rebuild its reputation for responsible spending and reducing regulation. As to why neither of these happened under Bush, Norquist said the president was too distracted by Iraq to get things done. "Bush tried to be mayor of Baghdad as well as president of the United States... Every briefing on the number of police (officers) in Baghdad was a moment that he wasn't president of the United States.''

What to expect under President-elect Obama

Basically, higher taxes and encroachments on gun rights. On the former, Norquist said, many people have been fortunate to come of age or gone into business at a time when there haven't been large tax increases. As for those who bought Obama's pitch that he would lower taxes: "I think some people are in for a rude shock.''

The next generation of Republican leaders

Norquist said the party shouldn't commit itself too early to 2012 contenders. About two breaths later, he gave high praise to the current governor of Louisiana. "Bobby Jindal... will be president of the United States some day.'' The governors of Texas, Florida and South Carolina also got a thumbs-up.

Sarah Palin

Norquist put the former McCain running mate in the top five of GOP up-and-comers but explicitly said she's not "next in line.'' He added that she's been a target for the left because of her potential: those who attack her are essentially trying to sack the other team's quarterback because she's such a valuable player. As for internal criticism of her from GOP operatives, Norquist said, it's because others are ambitious and as a former veep candidate, she "stands between everybody else and the gold ring.''

The pundits and the GOP's future

Columnists, whether they're liberal or conservative, who say the Republicans need to move more to the center after this election are just plain wrong, according to Norquist. They're deliberately trying to make conservatives depressed, "to try to get us to give up.''

Why Norquist is a lightning rod for the left

The surprisingly soft-spoken activist laughed as he referred to himself as the "evil, free-market Norquist.'' In his view, he inspires passionate criticism because the left takes his criticism too personally. They believe that they alone know best how to spend taxpayer dollars. And when he questions this, they interpret it as an attack on their intellect, intentions and morals. Norquist views tax dollars as individuals' money. Liberals, he said, view it as a public resource.

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Jill Burcum

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