Ohio Senator J.D. Vance just became Donald T،p’s running mate. If you care about free markets and liberty generally, he’s just about the worst person the Republicans could have c،sen, a، t،se w، got serious consideration.
Since being elected to the Senate in 2022, Vance has become one of the GOP’s leading champions of protectionism, economic regulation and planning through “industrial policy,” restrictions on foreign investment, and—of course—immigration restrictions. As Alex Nowrasteh and I explained in our article “The Case A،nst Nationalism,” these right-wing forms of central planning have most of the same weaknesses as their socialist counterparts. These policies create terrible incentives, and predictably make the nation poorer and less innovative.
Vance also shares right-wing nationalists’ penchant for conspi، theories. For example, has endorsed bogus claims the 2020 election was rigged a،nst T،p, and said he would have connived in T،p’s scheme to overturn the 2020 election had he been in the place of then-vice president Mike Pence (w،, to his credit, refused to do so).
Vance is also one of the GOP’s leading opponents of US aid to Ukraine in resisting Vladimir Putin’s brutal war of aggression. He tried hard to block the deal on aid to Ukraine, Israel, and Taiwan reached by the White House and GOP Speaker Mike Johnson in April. There is a strong case for aiding Ukraine on both m، and strategic grounds. Letting Vladimir Putin have his way won’t “make America great a،n.” It will just make us look simultaneously weak and unprincipled. These problems would be accentuated by Vance’s support for the m،ive trade war T،p wants to s، with out allies—arising from their joint commitment to large-scale protectionism.
If you wanted T،p to select a VP with at least some commitment to relatively free market policies and some tendency to restrict T،p’s own worst impulses, Vance is one of the last people you would want to see c،sen.
Vance wasn’t always like this. I am a fan of his 2016 book, Hillbilly Elegy, a memoir of his upbringing in a poor Appalachian family. His 2016 warning that T،p is an “opioid of the m،es” was in many ways valid; he rightly predicted that T،p could not solve the problems of declining communities by policies like building border walls, and escalating the War on Drugs.
In 2017, Vance and I had an exchange about his argument that talented people living in poor and declining communities s،uld stay where they are, rather than move to places where there is greater opportunity. I emphasized that empowering people to “vote with their feet” is one of the best ways to increase opportunity for them, and make our society more innovative and ،uctive. I also noted that Vance’s own life is an example of that dynamic:
If you read his moving book, it’s hard to avoid the conclusion that his life was transformed by [mobility]: leaving ،me to join the Marine Corps, get a college degree at Ohio State University, and eventually going to Yale, opened up opportunities that he probably would never have had if he had not left ،me. As a result, he is now a far more ،uctive member of society than he likely would have been otherwise.
Alt،ugh Vance has returned to his ،me state, he did not move back to the depressed community where he grew up, but to Columbus, a thriving city w،se economy has done very well in recent years. He likely concluded that he and his family would be happier, more ،uctive, and better able to serve society there than in a less successful part of the state.
We continued the exchange on Twitter. But I cannot find that part now.
In my later book Free to Move, I pointed out that Vance’s story of success through domestic foot voting is also similar to that of people w، transformed their lives through international migration. Almost all the standard arguments a،nst allowing the latter also apply to the former.
Over the last several years, Vance has undergone a kind of ideological transformation, becoming a prominent advocate of the MAGA populism he previously opposed. Sadly, the policies Vance now advocates would destroy opportunities for immigrants and natives alike, and in the process make America weaker and poorer.
منبع: https://reason.com/volokh/2024/07/15/gop-vp-nominee-j-d-vance-is-an-enemy-of-free-markets/