The Kaiser Family Foundation published an interesting report this week on public attitudes on health care, noting among other things that 57% of Americans do not want to defund the Affordable Care Act. This was, of course, not what Republicans and their allies wanted to hear.
The Heritage Foundation was apparently so despondent with the findings that it lost its reading-comprehension skills — the right-wing group unveiled a poster on Wednesday, asking folks to join the 57% of Americans who do want to defund “Obamacare.” When Heritage was told it simply read the poll wrong, and got the results backwards, the organization made the same mistake again.
Remember, the Heritage Foundation claims to be a think tank. For decades, it has presented itself as an institution committed to conservative research and scholarship. Heritage staffers aren’t supposed to be random, mindless hacks; they’re supposed to be providing the intellectual framework for modern conservatism.
And now they can’t read a poll.
Worse, this wasn’t Heritage’s biggest setback this week.
Even conservative House Republicans have finally had it with the Heritage Foundation, the conservative think tank that has aggressively pushed Republican congressmen to the right.
National Journal reports that the Republican Study Committee, a group of conservative House members with deep ties to Heritage, has banned Heritage employees from its meetings. They’re mad that Heritage tried to kill a farm subsidy bill that Republican House members very much wanted to pass back in July.
We can debate the merits of the underlying agricultural legislation, but in the larger context, the point is that things aren’t going especially well for Heritage. It’s failed to rally meaningful opposition to the Affordable Care Act; it’s had no real impact on the immigration debate it hoped to control; it’s new president, former Sen. Jim DeMint, is more often laughed at than listened to; the group has been banned from Republican Study Committee meetings; and it’s screwing up rudimentary poll analysis.
And don’t even get me started on the Jason Richwine fiasco.
All of this serves as a reminder about the growing “wonk gap.”
Indeed, it’s not just Heritage making things worse. The Cato Institute, the other major player among conservative think tanks, published a big report last week making the case that low-income Americans on “welfare” are better off than low-income families that actually have jobs.
It didn’t take long for the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities’ Sharron Parrott to tear it apart.
All of which leads us back to the “wonk gap” thesis that we’ve been kicking around for a while. To reiterate the argument, as Republicans become a post-policy party, even their wonks — their sharpest and most knowledgeable minds — are producing shoddy work that crumbles quickly under mild scrutiny, a problem we don’t see on the left.









