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Wednesday, March 04, 2009
WSJ: Deficits and Fiscal Credibility
Posted by: John Campbell at 12:11 PM

Today, the Wall Street Journal featured an Editorial by Indiana Senator Evan Bayh regarding President Obama’s Omnibus Appropriations Bill.  He encourages a ‘No’ vote and a return to fiscal responsibility in Washington.

WSJ

Deficits and Fiscal Credibility

A Democratic senator says no to a huge federal spending bill.

By: Evan Bayh

This week, the United States Senate will vote on a spending package to fund the federal government for the remainder of this fiscal year. The Omnibus Appropriations Act of 2009 is a sprawling, $410 billion compilation of nine spending measures that lacks the slightest hint of austerity from the federal government or the recipients of its largess.

The Senate should reject this bill. If we do not, President Barack Obama should veto it.

The omnibus increases discretionary spending by 8% over last fiscal year's levels, dwarfing the rate of inflation across a broad swath of issues including agriculture, financial services, foreign relations, energy and water programs, and legislative branch operations. Such increases might be appropriate for a nation flush with cash or unconcerned with fiscal prudence, but America is neither.

Drafted last year, the bill did not pass due to Congress's long-standing budgetary dysfunction and the frustrating delays it yields in our appropriations work. Since then, economic and fiscal circumstances have changed dramatically, which is why the Senate should go back to the drawing board. The economic downturn requires new policies, not more of the same.

Our nation's current fiscal imbalance is unprecedented, unsustainable and, if unaddressed, a major threat to our currency and our economic vitality. The national debt now exceeds $10 trillion. This is almost double what it was just eight years ago, and the debt is growing at a rate of about $1 million a minute.

Washington borrows from foreign creditors to fund its profligacy. The amount of U.S. debt held by countries such as China and Japan is at a historic high, with foreign investors holding half of America's publicly held debt. This dependence raises the specter that other nations will be able to influence our policies in ways antithetical to American interests. The more of our debt that foreign governments control, the more leverage they have on issues like trade, currency and national security. Massive debts owed to foreign creditors weaken our global influence, and threaten high inflation and steep tax increases for our children and grandchildren.

The solution going forward is to stop wasteful spending before it starts. Families and businesses are tightening their belts to make ends meet -- and Washington should too.

The omnibus debate is not merely a battle over last year's unfinished business, but the first indication of how we will shape our fiscal future. Spending should be held in check before taxes are raised, even on the wealthy. Most people are willing to do their duty by paying taxes, but they want to know that their money is going toward important priorities and won't be wasted.

Last week I was pleased to attend the president's White House Fiscal Responsibility Summit. It's about time we had a leader committed to addressing the deficit, and Mr. Obama deserves great credit for doing so. But what ultimately matters are not meetings or words, but actions. Those who vote for the omnibus this week -- after standing with the president and pledging to slice our deficit in half last week -- jeopardize their credibility.

As Indiana's governor, I balanced eight budgets, never raised taxes, and left the largest surplus in state history. It wasn't always easy. Cuts had to be made and some initiatives deferred. Occasionally I had to say "no."

But the bloated omnibus requires sacrifice from no one, least of all the government. It only exacerbates the problem and hastens the day of reckoning. Voters rightly demanded change in November's election, but this approach to spending represents business as usual in Washington, not the voters' mandate.

Now is the time to win back the confidence and trust of the American people. Congress should vote "no" on this omnibus and show working families across the country that we are as committed to living within our means as they are.

Mr. Bayh, a Democratic senator from Indiana, served as governor of Indiana from 1989 to 1997.






Monday, February 23, 2009
Obama Calls On McCain To Ask Him 1st Question
Posted by: Greg Hengler at 8:53 PM








Wednesday, May 21, 2008
HIGHER SPENDING, HIGHER TAXES, NO REFORM
Posted by: John Campbell at 12:56 PM

Today the House will consider the Budget Resolution Conference Report for 2009.  The report calls for record tax increases, increases discretionary spending by $241 billion above the President’s level over 5 years, and does nothing to reform entitlements or earmarks. Below are some of the highlights of what this budget WILL do:

  • Raises taxes by at least $683 billion over the next 5 years. These include increases in marginal tax rates; elimination of the 10-percent bracket for lower-income taxpayers; restore the marriage penalty, the death tax, as well as install higher tax rates on investments.
  • Authorizes More Than $1 Trillion over and above entitlements. The conference report increases so called “discretionary spending” by $21 above the President’s request, pushing it above $1 trillion for 2009. This translates to a spending increase of $241 billion when extended over 5 years.
  • Entitlements Continue on Automatic Pilot. This budget does nothing to address the growing entitlement problem. Medicare and Social Security alone currently face $40 billion in unfunded liabilities, and that figure is growing unchecked every year.
  • Record Debt Increase. Although Democrats claim to balance the budget by 2012, the conference report results in the largest debt increase in history – from $8.951 trillion in 2007 to $9.575 trillion in 2008 – and increase of $624 billion this year.
  • No Earmark Reform. Having repeatedly decried the scandal of earmarks, the Majority does nothing in the budget to address them. Last year’s appropriations bills included some 11,000 earmarks totaling $14.8 billion – and under this budget, the trend will continue.

Not only will this budget stifle economic growth, it will increase our debt level, and authorize an enormous amount of money for discretionary spending.  That isn’t even accounting for what the budget fails to do! ….Scary thought isn’t it?





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 Re: Chuck Todd: Obama Won Peace Prize For Defending American Exceptionalism Or Something
  By Chris
Facts are facts....and they are POWERFUL
 Re: Chuck Todd: Obama Won Peace Prize For Defending American Exceptionalism Or Something
  By Chris
NOTW
 Re: Awaiting a Bigger Payoff?
  By Molotov
arch
 Re: 66% Don't Think Obama Deserves The Nobel
  By Molotov
Lousiana Purchase
 Re: Awaiting a Bigger Payoff?
  By NOTW
Constitutional Scholars wanted!
 Re: 66% Don't Think Obama Deserves The Nobel
  By arch
One more thing Molotov,
 Re: 66% Don't Think Obama Deserves The Nobel
  By arch
Molotov I am never scared!
 Re: 66% Don't Think Obama Deserves The Nobel
  By arch
Molotov
 Re: 66% Don't Think Obama Deserves The Nobel
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Munck
 Re: Teachers Union President: Teachers Should Be Agents for "Social Justice"
  By NOTW
Molotov. a suggestion for you!
 Re: 66% Don't Think Obama Deserves The Nobel
  By arch
arch
 Re: 66% Don't Think Obama Deserves The Nobel
  By Molotov
arch
 Re: 66% Don't Think Obama Deserves The Nobel
  By Molotov
Molotov
 Re: 66% Don't Think Obama Deserves The Nobel
  By arch
arch
 Re: 66% Don't Think Obama Deserves The Nobel
  By Molotov
Molotov
 Re: 66% Don't Think Obama Deserves The Nobel
  By arch
arch
 Re: 66% Don't Think Obama Deserves The Nobel
  By Molotov
Must be...
 Re: Teachers Union President: Teachers Should Be Agents for "Social Justice"
  By Eric, from THE Republic of Texas
Molotov! Damn your stupid!
 Re: 66% Don't Think Obama Deserves The Nobel
  By arch
Molotov 12:30 AM
 Re: Teachers Union President: Teachers Should Be Agents for "Social Justice"
  By Bob Munck

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