Norquist: Republicans Aren’t Cracking on Taxes

Reports of Republican lawmakers abandoning the party's long-held position against tax hikes have been greatly exaggerated, according to one of the nation's most influential conservative voices.

Not only is the GOP not going to agree to new or higher taxes without simultaneous spending cuts, but the tea party, which in the last two years has sent a number of establishment Republicans into retirement, is poised to have an even bigger impact on American politics in the 2014 midterm elections. This, according to Grover Norquist, is simply the way it is.

With concerns about the fiscal cliff -- the combination of tax increases and government spending reductions that could go into effect at the start of next year -- dominating the headlines, President Obama and Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner have been leading the argument that higher taxes on the richest U.S. citizens is one of the keys to reaching a compromise that would avoid the cliff.

Both parties have acknowledged that the nation could see a steep economic downturn in 2013 if a deal does not happen. However, reports have emerged in recent days that members of the Republican camp could be open to giving the White House more tax dollars if it meant reaching an agreement. Norquist, president of Americans for Tax Reform, isn't buying it.

Read His Lips: No New Taxes

Going back to the 1980s, Norquist has gotten GOP legislators to sign the Taxpayer Protection Pledge, guaranteeing they would oppose tax increases. He says Republicans will abide by the vow even if a small number of them are having "impure thoughts."

"Interestingly, this is a replay of what happened two years ago when the press was focused on a handful of Republican senators who were thinking about raising taxes as part of the debt-ceiling deal," Norquist says in the attached video. "Obama, hearing about that, dropped his negotiations with [current House Speaker John] Boehner, upped his demands, and the whole negotiations fell apart. And from my perspective, things went swimmingly, because we got all spending cuts and no tax increases."

However, partly as a result of the debt-ceiling struggles, the U.S. did lose its triple-A rating from Standard & Poor's. Asked whether continuing doubts about the nation's financial position make the need for a pact more pressing this time around, Norquist says tax increases can't be the way to get it done. "Raising taxes instead of reining in spending is bad for our long-term political and economic health," he says.

What's being overlooked, he adds, is that the Republicans who have been discussing tax increases, such as South Carolina Sen. Lindsey Graham, have expressed support for tax hikes before. In addition, these same members of the GOP expect lower spending to join any higher taxes, and because of these conditions "they're not on the same planet as Barack Obama."