Welcome to the Four Seasons Hotel,
and to the only city in America
where you can witness two seasons unfolding at the same time.
Right now, Republicans are
enduring a bitter winter of popular discontent, while Democrats have
entered the warm spring of political renewal.
Spring has been a long time coming
for the Democrats, who have seen their political standing steadily eroded by a
rising tide of conservatism since the nation's bicentennial year of 1976.
Back then a young fellow named
Donald Rumsfeld was defense secretary, and as he departed office at the end of
the Ford Administration he could scarcely have imagined that the coming decades
would see a resurgence of his Republican Party.
Not only had Ford lost the
White House to Georgia
governor Jimmy Carter, but Democrats held a two-to-one margin in the House of
Representatives and a solid majority in the Senate.
It looked like the Watergate
scandal had handed control of the federal government back to the
Democrats, and that they would reclaim the status of dominant national party
they had enjoyed from the beginning of the Great Depression to the Vietnam War.
As you all know, that didn't
happen -- Carter's presidency was a disaster, and Ronald Reagan's election
in 1980 began a Republican renaissance that ultimately led to conservative
dominance of all three branches of the federal government.
Donald Rumsfeld was away from Washington for most of
that time, getting rich in the private sector, so it may be more than mere
coincidence that when he returned to the Pentagon at the beginning of the
new millennium, the Republican revolution began to falter.
In fact, many Republicans today
believe that Rumsfeld's second run as defense secretary is the main reason why
Democrats regained control of both chambers of Congress last November for the
first time in a dozen years.
That's what I want to talk about
today -- the Democratic resurgence, the departure of Rumsfeld, and what it
means for the defense sector.
A Changing Political Landscape
The prevailing view here in River
City is that the return of the Democrats won't change much in the defense
sector because Republicans still hold the White House, Democratic margins on
Capitol Hill are thin, and both parties are posturing for the 2008 presidential
election.
It's true that the Democratic
victory in November falls short of being a realignment -- the winners only
picked up 29 seats in the lower chamber and six in the Senate, which is not
that far off the averages for a midterm election.
Democrats wouldn't control the
upper chamber at all were it not for the willingness of independents Joe
Lieberman and Bernie Sanders to caucus with them.
But the conventional wisdom that
little will change in the defense sector looks shaky when
you consider the broader backdrop against which the Democratic resurgence
is playing out...
-- First of all, the nation
appears to be gradually losing a war, and past experience tells us that when
wars end defense spending goes down.
-- Second, the President who
led the nation into the war has never been highly popular except in the
immediate aftermath of the 9-11 attacks, and today his support has shrunken to
barely a third of the electorate.
-- Third, the absence
of attacks on the American homeland since 9-11 has dulled popular
awareness of the terrorist threat and diminished the political support for new
defense initiatives.
-- Fourth, the core of the
Bush defense agenda (military transformation) has been discredited by poor
performance in Iraq,
and its principle architect has departed the Pentagon.
When you combine those
security-related trends with other developments on the domestic front -- the
aging of baby boomers, the budget deficit, and so on -- we could be in for
big changes in the defense sector.
Obviously, any repetition of the 9-11
attacks would also mean big changes for the sector, mainly on the upside.
But in the absence of such
traumas, we may be at a top in terms of both defense spending and Republican
fortunes.
Which means we need to pay
closer attention to what Democrats might do if they consolidate their hold
on power.
So let's take a look at the
Democrats, and ask some questions...
-- Who are they?
-- What do they believe?
-- What interests do they
represent?
-- What is their defense
agenda?
-- Who have they put in key
leadership positions affecting the defense sector?
Who Are The Democrats?
In terms of who they are, the
Democrats trace their origins to the Democratic-Republican Party that Thomas
Jefferson and James Madison established in 1792 to battle Alexander Hamilton's
Federalists.
That makes them the oldest
political party in the world, but it also makes them something else -- the more
populist of the two national parties.
From Thomas Jefferson to Andrew
Jackson to William Jennings Bryan to Franklin Roosevelt, the Democratic Party
has always tended to side with workers against management, farmers against
railroads, and immigrants against old money.
In other words, within the
peculiar topography of the American political landscape, the Democrats are the
party of labor and the Republicans are the party of capital.
So Democrats are less trusting of
markets and big corporations, more comfortable with taxes and regulation.
You can see those biases on
display in the party's endorsement of a higher minimum wage and limits on
lobbying, and in its criticism of big oil and big drug companies.
However, Democratic views on
defense are a good deal more complicated than Republican partisans would have
you believe.
Although the Vietnam War soured
some Democrats on the military, most of the big surges in defense spending
during the last century occurred during Democratic administrations.
If you look at where Republican
and Democratic electoral strength is concentrated today, military bases tend to
be located in "red" states but military contractors tend to be located in "blue" states.
In other words, the states where
the Democrats generate their strongest support at the polls -- in the
Northeast, on the PacificCoast, in the industrial Midwest
---are also states where there is a substantial defense-industry presence.
The same holds true for the
handful of states where Democrats have been gaining new strength recently,
namely Colorado, Florida
and Virginia.
The alignment of Democratic
interests with military production is further reinforced by the
demographic characteristics of the defense workforce.
Whereas the ranks of war-fighters
are filled disproportionately with people from rural backgrounds who tend to
vote Republican, defense plants are populated by blue-collar, unionized workers
who tend to vote Democratic.
And the strength of Democrats
among civilian defense workers isn't confined just to the private sector,
because workers in military depots and naval shipyards belong to public-sector
unions that also comprise part of the Democratic base.
These public-sector unions have
been a growing source of Democratic votes in recent years, a development
that helps offset the declining electoral impact of private-sector unions.
So the widespread perception that
Republicans favor defense contractors while Democrats worry about enlisted
personnel is out of sync with the actual alignment of partisan interests.
The soldiers tend to vote
Republican while the defense industrial base tends to vote Democratic.
In fact, the defense sector is one
place where the divide between capital and labor has very little electoral
salience, because in the defense sector even the most senior corporate
executives are often Democrats.
If you talk to these executives,
they will tell you that Senators such as Clinton, Kennedy and Dodd have been
strong supporters of their interests -- and then they will mention that Donald
Rumsfeld didn't manage to have a single meeting with a defense-industry
executive during his entire six years as Bush's defense secretary.
Why Democrats Seem
Anti-Defense
Rumsfeld's indifference to the
defense industry isn't so surprising when you consider Republican economic
philosophy, because from his perspective the whole sector is a market
distortion.
And it also isn't surprising that
Democrats, the party of big government, would be more comfortable with an
industry dependent on government funding for its sustenance.
What is surprising is that this
underlying symmetry of interests and ideology has gone largely unnoticed.
For instance, last year Merrill
Lynch put out an analysis claiming to prove that Republican control of the
government is the main reason spending on military technology increases, and
Democratic control is the main reason it falls.
According to Merrill, the lowest
level of defense technology spending likely in a Republican administration
exceeds the highest level likely in a Democratic administration.
It concluded that partisan control
is a much stronger predictor of trends in military technology outlays than
threats are, accounting for 76% of the variation from year to year.
If that were true, it would
certainly help to explain why so many observers think Republicans are better
friends of the defense sector than Democrats are.
However, when you look closely at
the Merrill findings, some caveats jump out...
-- First, the strong
correlation between military technology outlays and partisan control only began
to appear after Vietnam,
when the Democratic Party turned hard left with disastrous electoral
consequences for two decades.
-- Second, at about the time
Democrats were finding their way back to political mainstream under Bill
Clinton the Cold War ended, so his administration took office at a moment when
there was bipartisan agreement on cutting defense.
-- Third, President Clinton
inherited from his predecessor the biggest federal budget deficit in
history, which gave him a strong incentive to cut both defense
and domestic spending.
So it's a little hard to square
the thesis that Republicans favor the defense sector and Democrats
favor domestic spending with the historical facts.
The reality is that Dick
Cheney killed a hundred major weapons programs while he was defense
secretary, and that entitlement spending has risen twice as fast under George
W. Bush as it did under Bill Clinton.
Which brings me to the subject of
the Democratic agenda for defense in the 110th Congress.
The Democratic Defense
Agenda
When comedian Will Rogers remarked
that he didn't belong to an organized political party because he was a
Democrat, he captured an essential truth about his party.
The Democrats have always been a
loose coalition of interests, both at the grassroots level and in Congress.
Unlike the Republicans on Capitol
Hill, who have fashioned a strong leadership structure and limited the power of
committee chairmen, the Democrats lack a center of gravity.
When they last controlled the
Congress, the Democrats who ran committees did pretty much what they wanted,
and frequently ignored the pleas of their leadership for party unity.
Having wandered in the political
wilderness for a dozen years, the party now is trying to foster more discipline
among its members in both chambers so that they can take better advantage of
their majorities.
Nonetheless, it is hard to
describe simply where Democrats stand on issues such as national defense
because there are so many contending views within the party.
After reviewing the public
pronouncements of party leaders and prospective chairmen on relevant
committees, I've come up with a list of eight defense themes that most
Democrats in the 110th Congress will probably embrace.
Here they are in descending order
of popularity among the Democratic faithful.
First of all, get U.S.
troops out of Iraq.
Party leaders usually describe
this position as "redeployment" rather than retreat, but the vast
majority of Democrats believe the war was a mistake and that it is not
winnable.
They probably won't use their
control of finances to cut off funding and some of them may even back a
near-term increase in troop strength, but there's little doubt the top
Democratic agenda item for defense is to get out of Iraq.
Second, prevent new terrorist attacks on America.
Every Democrat in Congress would
agree with this goal, although consensus breaks down over how to achieve it.
In general, Democrats prefer
stronger homeland security measures and diplomatic initiatives to defeat
terrorism rather than aggressive use of U.S. military forces in foreign
countries.
The Bush Administration's notion
that if we don't fight terrorists overseas then we will have to fight them here
at home does not get many takers among the Democratic rank-and-file.
In fact, Democrats tend to think
that sending U.S.
troops abroad to engage terrorists makes the problem worse.
Third, bolster troop readiness and reset battle-worn equipment.
Readiness has been a persistent
theme of Democrats on defense for two decades, which helps explain why the
Clinton Administration neglected procurement accounts in favor of operations
and maintenance on its watch.
Much of the money spent on
readiness finds its way to Democratic constituencies such as the workers who do
equipment maintenance at military depots, so there's an electoral angle to the
stress on readiness.
The same is true of reset, the
refurbishing or replacement of battle-worn equipment -- it channels money to
repair depots and National Guard armories where the Democrats enjoy significant
electoral support.
Fourth, rein in unnecessary spending and crack down on contractor
abuses.
Many Democrats believe that
military aircraft and warships have grown outrageously expensive, signaling the
need for yet another round of acquisition reform.
They also are exercised about the
supposed misuse of funds by contractors supporting U.S.
troops in Iraq,
and plan to launch investigations of the way in which such contracts were
awarded.
What they'll discover is that
Halliburton, their favorite whipping boy, has only made a one-and-one-half
percent return on its Iraq
work, and that soldiers in the field are pleased with the company's
performance.
But the notion of
contractor corruption in war zones is too sensational for Democrats
to pass up -- especially given Dick Cheney's former ties to Halliburton -- so
don't expect this issue to fall out of the Democratic agenda anytime
soon.
Fifth, expand benefits for military personnel, dependents and
retirees.
Although relatively few Democrats
under the age of fifty have served in the military, they feel a strong sense of
obligation to support the people who do.
They also recognize that military
families have become an important electoral constituency for Republicans, so
they are not going to do anything that confirms the families in that
preference.
Thus, the recent tendency of
Congress to add military benefits regardless of whether they have been
requested by the Pentagon or not is likely to persist, putting added pressure
on the defense budget.
Sixth, expand ground forces, especially the Army.
This position is a little hard to
fathom, since Democrats want to get out of Iraq
and that's the main source of stress for U.S. ground forces today.
However, Democrats have adopted
the Army as their favorite service because it seems to be bearing most of the
burden of the global war on terror, and retired generals have been calling for
an increase in the size of the active-duty force.
During the 2004 presidential
election, Democratic standard-bearer John Kerry called for 40,000 more troops,
and that idea still has strong support among congressional Democrats.
Seventh, limit the outsourcing of civilian defense jobs to the
private sector.
As I mentioned earlier,
public-sector unions have become a key source of Democratic electoral support,
so many legislators in the new majority have positioned themselves as defenders
of federal workers.
That role is reinforced by
Democratic distrust of markets and big companies, but it raises questions about
how the government will cope with the impending retirement of tens of thousands
of federal workers.
Eighth (and finally), position Democrats as strong supporters of
national defense.
Democrats know that defense is
their key electoral weakness, practically the only area where the Republicans
beat them in surveys by a wide margin.
With preparations for the 2008
presidential race already under way, they would like to use their control of
Congress to prove that they too are strong defenders of the nation.
That will be a hard idea to sell
at the same time they are pushing the Bush administration to give up the fight
in Iraq,
so Democrats will probably try to burnish their defense credential by giving
the military almost everything else it wants.
Throwing money at the military isn't
what most people would expect from the Democrats -- especially given their
rhetoric about fiscal responsibility -- but balanced budgets have never been
much of a vote-getter.
The bottom line on the Democratic
defense agenda is that it doesn't reflect much support for new technology
outlays, but it also doesn't herald an era of rapidly declining defense
budgets.
What's likely to change is the
composition of defense spending rather than the scale -- a point I will come
back to at the end of my remarks.
Four Key Chairman
But before I draw some conclusions
about the outlook for the sector, there are two other topics I'd like to
address -- the backgrounds of Democrats running key committees, and the
relevance of Donald Rumsfeld's resignation for the Democratic resurgence.
The reason the Democratic defense
agenda seems so uneven and incomplete is that it reflects the views of
contending factions within the party -- factions that often don't see
eye-to-eye even when they coalesce around a particular position.
Aside from the diversity of
Democratic views, there is the fact that the Republicans have been running the
government for some time, and Democrats are a bit rusty on the more technical
questions.
So it will take a
while to translate Democratic convictions and constituencies into policy,
and that task will fall largely on the shoulders of a handful of committee and
subcommittee chairmen.
Let's take a look at the four most
important chairmen, and ask what their backgrounds tell us about their likely
positions on key defense issues.
First, there is Senator Daniel
Inouye of Hawaii,
at 82 years old the third most senior member of the Senate after Robert Byrd
and Edward Kennedy.
Byrd will be running
the Appropriations Committee in the Senate, but on most defense issues he
will defer to Inouye, chairman of the defense subcommittee.
And who is Inouye?
No doubt about it, he's a liberal -- but he's also a decorated combat veteran who lost his arm while serving
with the 442nd Regimental Combat Team in World War Two.
Inouye and ranking Republican Ted
Stevens of Alaska
have established a track record of strong bipartisan support for the
military on the subcommittee that few observers expect to change -- a record
reinforced by the interests of Inouye's home state.
Unlike other Senate Democrats,
Inouye has been a steady supporter of missile defense, and
he seldom questions the need for major weapons systems.
So the defense appropriations
subcommittee is one place where a switch to Democratic control is likely
to have minimal impact on military outlays.
The situation is a bit different
on the Senate Armed Services Committee, where incoming Chairman Carl
Levin does not share Inouye's enthusiasm for missile defense
or the defense industry.
Levin is the most persistent
critic of missile defense in the Senate, and has been a strong proponent of
arms control since the 1970s.
He has also joined with fellow
committee member John McCain in questioning the proposal to lease
tankers from Boeing, and more generally in challenging the way the defense
industry does business.
However, when Levin served as
committee chairman in 2001 and 2002, he focused
on military personnel and management processes rather than weapons
programs, and it seems significant that he has chosen not to go forward with
high-profile hearings on the defense industry that McCain had been
planning if he took over the chairmanship.
Although Levin is no great friend
of defense contractors, he follows the model of former committee
chairman John Warner of Virginia
in stressing bipartisan cooperation and avoiding confrontations.
Levin is likely to hew to the
liberal line on arms control, missile defense and outsourcing, but he
will only rarely question the need for major weapons programs.
The situation in the House of
Representatives is, if anything, more favorable for the sector.
The chairman of the defense
appropriations subcommittee in the House will be Jack Murtha,
a Marine combat veteran who was awarded two Purple Hearts and a Bronze Star for
valor in Vietnam.
Murtha has been a strident critic
of the Bush Administration's management of the Iraq war, questioning both the
decision to go to war and the way in which troops are equipped.
But he is no one's idea of a
liberal, having voted for just about every major weapons program and
even for reinstatement of the draft.
Although Murtha reserves his
greatest passion for protecting and paying the troops, he is a good friend of
the defense sector who will support increasing money for both readiness and
procurement.
Finally there is Ike
Skelton, the incoming chairman of the House Armed Services Committee.
Skelton is the product of a
military family who was precluded from serving because of a childhood encounter
with polio.
Nonetheless, he has done as much
as any member of the House to assure that America's military is well-paid,
well-trained and well-equipped.
It was Skelton who warned
Secretary Rumsfeld two years ago that the continuous rotation of soldiers into Iraq would eventually
destroy the Army's combat edge, and he has consistently demonstrated a detailed
grasp of military strategy and tactics.
He has also been a strong
supporter of military investment outlays, stressing the importance of air power
and sea power in supporting a vigorous global security posture.
Skelton isn't a reflexive
supporter of every weapons program, but he's about as good as it gets in
Congress when it comes to supporting the defense sector -- smart, patriotic,
bipartisan, and a true believer in the value of modern military technology.
So if you thought that the
Democrats were going to install a collection of peace-niks at the helm of key
defense committees, guess again -- the new Democratic chairmen are likely to be
at least as supportive of the defense sector as their Republican predecessors
were.
Rumsfeld's Departure
The one other factor at work in
the Democratic resurgence that I want to address before drawing some
conclusions about the outlook for the defense sector is Donald Rumsfeld's departure
from the Pentagon.
Because Rumsfeld tried to stay out
of acquisition matters, many observers don't grasp how crucial his role has
been in defining the contours of defense demand over the last six years.
However, he has been a powerful
force not only in advancing military transformation, but also in defining what
that phrase meant.
In a way, he has been the only
force, because the White House delegated management of military transformation
to Rumsfeld and exercised very little oversight, while the concept
never won much of a following on Capitol Hill.
So as long as Rumsfeld had the
President's support, he was free to decide which investment goals were most
important, and which programs would not be priorities in the future.
The Republican Congress often
didn't like the choices he made, but it was loathe to oppose the White House --
especially after 9-11 when the nation was at war.
In general, Rumsfeld favored
networks, sensors, space systems and unmanned vehicles over the signature weapons
platforms of the past, and he favored research over procurement because his
goal was to leap ahead in a revolutionary way rather than simply evolving.
He also tried hard
to transform defense business practices by shrinking infrastructure at
home and abroad, integrating a balkanized management structure, and outsourcing
non-core functions.
But transformation has now been
discredited by lack of military success in Iraq, and that has opened the way
for a wholesale reevaluation of investment priorities at precisely the moment
when Democrats are assuming control of Congress.
Without Rumsfeld, the Bush
Administration no longer has a vision of what the future military should look
like, and that gives Democrats more latitude to enforce their own defense
investment priorities.
Sector Outlook
I will now conclude my remarks by
offering eight predictions on where the defense technology and services
sector is headed in the aftermath of the Democratic election victory.
First, the future vector of spending for military technology and
services will be determined mainly by whether we suffer another terrorist
attack on the American homeland.
Over the last year, defense
spending has broken out of a range that it had previously remained within for
five decades.
That range -- between three
hundred billion and five hundred billion dollars annually in constant 2007
dollars -- has been substantially exceeded on the upside due to supplemental
appropriations for the Iraq
war.
This development means one of
two things -- either we are at a top, or a new pattern of spending has emerged
in the sector.
My guess is that the old pattern
will reassert itself in the absence of another terror attack, and spending will
stabilize around $500 billion annually under the Democrats.
If there is another 9-11
style attack, though, we are headed much higher across the board in defense
spending, with hardware and services portions of the sector both
benefiting substantially.
Second, if the top-line of defense spending stabilizes, that will
not mean that outlays in each major component of the budget will stabilize
too.
Within the consumption accounts,
personnel outlays are likely to continue increasing as the Army
expands its headcount and healthcare costs rise, while operations and
maintenance accounts stagnate or decline in response to diminished activity in Iraq.
I know that most of you are
expecting increased activity in Iraq in the near term, but with Democrats in
power and the war going poorly, I think that will be a short-lived phenomenon
before "redeployment" begins.
Within the investment accounts,
procurement outlays are likely to rise as reset unfolds and modernization
programs ramp up, while R & D outlays decline in response to the
waning of transformation and the transition of development programs into
production.
Thus, companies engaged in
integrating weapons systems and supporting personnel are likely to fare better
than those engaged in research and sustainment.
Third, military transformation will cease to be a significant
driver of defense outlays, and many of the programs most closely associated
with transformation will wither.
Among the major systems
currently in development likely to suffer from the demise of military
transformation are the Future Combat System, the Transformational
Communications Satellite, Space Radar and the Joint Tactical Radio System.
Most such programs will be
restructured rather than canceled, but as they stretch out the military will be
forced to investigate cheaper alternatives and also procure more services to
support aging systems that the restructured programs were supposed to replace.
This could turn out to be a boon
for services providers, who will be needed to refresh legacy systems previously
destined for retirement.
Fourth, hardware spending within the procurement account will
tend to migrate away from big system-of-system networking projects, and in the
direction of more traditional weapons programs.
This trend is dictated by the
aging of the Cold War arsenal, the waning of transformation,
the difficulty of implementing complex information architectures, and the
lack of congressional enthusiasm for big networking initiatives.
Democrats and Republicans alike
prefer traditional weapons systems to information networks because it is easier
to trace the jobs impact of planes, ships and tanks on particular congressional
districts.
That is one reason why
military transformation never really connected on Capitol Hill, and why even
the most liberal Democrats generally have a good track record of supporting
weapons made in their home states.
Fifth, defense demand will continue to follow the commercial
economy in gradually migrating away from manufactured goods towards services.
Over the last fifteen years, the
share of federal acquisition outlays spent on products has declined from 47% to
40%, while the share spent on services has increased from 37% to 47% (the
balance is R&D).
I expect that trend to persist for
a variety or reasons, not the least of which is that it is possible to increase
the purchase of services without increasing budgets through outsourcing of jobs
previously performed by public-sector workers.
Outsourcing is likely to become
harder under the Democrats, but given budget pressures and the impending retirement
of many federal workers engaged in IT, telecoms, maintenance and other
services, it looks like outsourcing will continue to be an important trend in
the sector.
Sixth, the most important new service opportunities in the defense
sector will typically arise where one of three conditions prevail...
-- Demand is outstripping
government capacity;
-- An aging federal
workforce signals mass retirements; or
-- No federal capacity to
provide a service currently exists.
Where there is an established
federal capacity to provide services not facing high demand or mass
retirements, it will be hard for outside providers to make inroads under the
Democrats.
Not only are Democrats determined
to protect public-sector jobs, but their plans to drawdown in Iraq will
reduce the future workloads of government depots and supply centers,
encouraging managers to pull outsourced work back in-house.
Public-private partnerships may
provide companies with one way of avoiding the loss of outsourced business, but
those relationships need to be locked in now, before federal employees detect
the waning of Iraq-related demand for their skills.
Thus, the forecast for outsourcing
of military services is mixed, with more outsourcing in IT and telecoms, but
less in depot maintenance and sustainment.
Seventh, the biggest service providers in the defense sector will
continue to gain market share in the years ahead, largely at the expense of
smaller providers.
You can see that trend already
unfolding in the federal IT market, where the share of prime contractor dollars
going to big companies increased from 50% to 65% in just two years.
In a defense sector where federal
outlays are growing fast the increased market share of big
companies isn't necessarily bad news for smaller companies because the
whole market is expanding, but when outlays stop growing, smaller firms are
likely to get squeezed.
Not only does the federal
government prefer to deal with big, familiar firms that can bundle services,
but those firms bring much more marketing clout to the table in pursuing
contracts.
So if you were thinking of selling
your small services business to one of the majors, now's the time to do it --
as you've no doubt heard, they're in the market for companies with niche
capabilities.
Finally, one last development, the biggest companies in defense
technology and services will expand their pursuit of non-traditional
opportunities in the years ahead.
Many of these companies are
worried that defense spending will level off during the rest of the decade,
and that the only way to avoid reporting weak year-over-year results to
Wall Street is to enter new markets.
Since service skills in
IT, logistics and other fields are often fungible across markets, you
shouldn't be surprised to see some of the biggest defense firms pushing
into areas like healthcare where you wouldn't have expected to find
them a few years ago.
Well, I guess I've talked
enough because I'm well over my allotted time, so I'll stop
there...