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| Feature: The Policy Revolutionaries | ||
| Case Study: Estate Tax Repeal
Elizabeth Harris 05/01/2006 |
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The Republican Party’s successful campaign to eliminate the estate tax is one example of how advocacy think tanks advanced a goal, in this case by networking with antitax groups.
Their efforts were effective, at least in part, because so little was done to oppose them. Ian Shapiro, the Sterling professor of political science at Yale, explores the role think tanks played in Death by a Thousand Cuts, a book he cowrote with Michael Graetz. "Largely on the Democratic side, most people thought the estate tax could never be repealed, and they didn’t take it seriously until it was pretty far along," Shapiro explains. In 1997, the American Enterprise Institute’s Norman Ornstein wrote a
USA Today article in which he warned Democrats to pay more attention to the issue.
But the opposition failed to emerge until 2001, when a group that included
Warren Buffett and Bill Gates Sr. began to mobilize. Gates was among those who
purchased an ad in the New York
Times arguing against the repeal. "We
came to the judgment that their role was de minimis," Shapiro says. "They got in
right at the end, and they didn’t put resources into it." |