The Iowa caucuses, the real start of the 2020 presidential primaries, are next week. Who’s favored to win? Sadly, as I write this, the smart money says it’s the candidate who’s promised Americans the most “free” stuff.
Six months ago, my staff and I tallied the candidates’ promises. All wanted to give away trillions—or more accurately, wanted government to tax you and spend your money on the candidates’ schemes.
At that point, Sen. Kamala Harris (D-Calif.) led. Fortunately, her promises didn’t bring her sustained support, and she dropped out.
Unfortunately, now the other candidates are making even more promises.
So, it’s time for a new contest.
Education
Joe Biden would make community college free, cut student loans in half, increase Pell Grants, and modernize schools.Added to his previous campaign promises, he'd increase federal spending by $157 billion per year.
Sen Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) would spend much more. She wants the government to “provide universal child care for every baby in this country age 0 to 5, universal pre-K for every child, raise the wages of every childcare worker and preschool teacher in America, provide for universal tuition-free college, put $50 billion into historically black colleges and universities ... and cancel student loan debt for 95 percent of the people.”
She'd outspend Biden—but not Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.).
Former South Bend, Indiana, Mayor Pete Buttigieg also promises free child care, more pay for teachers, more career education, free college and Pell Grants, plus the refinancing of student debt.
Climate
All the Democrats pretend they will do something useful about climate change. Biden would spend $170 billion per year, Buttigieg $150 billion to $200 billion, and Warren $300 billion. Sanders “wins” this category, too, by promising more than $1 trillion.Health Care
Even the “moderate,” Biden, now wants to “build out Obamacare” and to cover people here illegally.So does Buttigieg—but he'd spend twice as much on it.
Warren complains the Buttigieg plan “costs so much less” than her plan. She'd spend $2 trillion a year.
Welfare
In this category, Biden, to his credit, plans no new spending.Warren would also spend more on “affordable housing” and give kids more food stamps.
Miscellaneous
Then there’s spending that doesn’t neatly fit into major categories, like Biden’s plans for new foreign aid for Central America, Sanders’ high-speed internet, Buttigieg’s expanding national service programs like the Peace Corps, and Warren’s plan to force the government to buy only U.S.-made products.Finally, we found a spending category that Sanders doesn’t win. With $130 billion in new plans, Biden wins the “miscellaneous” round.
And what about that incumbent Republican?
President Donald Trump once talked about “cutting waste,” but government spending rose more than half a trillion dollars during his first three years.
Now Trump wants $267 billion in new spending for things like infrastructure and “access to high-quality, affordable childcare.”
At least Trump wants to spend less than the Democrats.
Biden and Buttigieg would double Trump’s increase. Warren would quadruple it. She'd increase spending by almost $3 trillion.
But Bernie Sanders blows them all out of the water, with nearly $5 trillion in proposed new spending!
“I’m not denying we’re going to spend a lot of money,” he admits.
He'll probably win in Iowa next week. Whoever wins ... taxpayers lose.