Trump Totally Blew Off CNN During His Tariff Presser Yesterday
This State Is Getting Closer to Eliminating Property Taxes
How America Has Destroyed Its Democracy, Part Two: The Aristocracy of Merit
Three Congressional Missteps on Healthcare
Today’s Qualifications to Be President of the U.S.
Climate Alarmists Howl After EPA Rescinds ‘Endangerment Finding’
Three Iranian Nationals Indicted For Attempting to Sell Google Secrets to Home Country
Ukraine's Bureaucrats Are Finishing What China Started
Rising Federal Debt: Why Strategic Planning Matters More Than Ever for High-Net-Worth Fami...
Classroom Political Activism Shifts a Teacher’s Role from Educator to Indoctrinator
As America Celebrates 250, We Must Help Iran Celebrate Another 2,500
Guatemalan Citizen Admits Using Stolen Identity to Obtain Custody of Teen Migrant
Oregon-Based Utility PacifiCorp Settles for $575M Over Six Devastating Wildfires
Armed Man Rammed Substation Near Las Vegas in Apparent Terror Plot Before Committing...
DOJ Moves to Strip U.S. Citizenship From Former North Miami Mayor Over Immigration...
OPINION

Washington’s Unserious Budget Shenanigans Could Have Serious Consequences

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.
Washington’s Unserious Budget Shenanigans Could Have Serious Consequences

Now that the President, the House, and the Senate have released their budgets for the upcoming fiscal year, many taxpayers are wondering what to make of these competing plans. Certainly, there are a lot of questions to ask while evaluating the merits of a budget: does it achieve balance in a ten-year window? Does it set the foundation for entitlement reform? Does it chart a course for fixing our broken tax code?

Advertisement

While these are all important questions, they are largely academic. Budgets are non-binding. They aren’t laws and cannot enact major policy changes. They are mostly symbolic documents that carry no practical importance – with two significant exceptions.

First, the budget can create a path to reconciliation – an arcane process that can help expedite the passage of policies deemed to reduce the deficit. Senate Democrats effectively used this process to approve large portions of the Affordable Care Act (ACA) in 2010. Many Republicans on the Hill believe reconciliation could be the key to rolling back some of the ACA now that the GOP is in control of both houses of Congress. On this point, taxpayers should cheer both the House and Senate budget, as they both open the door for the reconciliation process.

The second reason the budget is important is for setting the top-line numbers that indicate what Congress can spend in the upcoming fiscal year. On this point, taxpayers should be very, very concerned.

Back in 2011, Congress and President Obama approved the Budget Control Act, a law that while imperfect, did have the salutary effect of establishing budget caps. These caps have represented perhaps the biggest legislative victory for fiscal conservatives in years. By restraining the growth of spending, we’ve seen greater fiscal discipline and a shrinking federal deficit.

Advertisement

Now, just five years after the caps were put into place, the House and Senate budgets would make a mockery of them. Technically, both budgets comply with the caps, but they do so by disingenuously pumping tens of billions of dollars into the uncapped Overseas Contingency Operations (OCO) account.

OCO is supposed to be used solely for emergencies and military operations, but both the Senate and House budgets would turn it into a slush fund that allows them to skirt the budget caps.

The House budget would allow for $94 billion – 38 percent above the Pentagon’s request of $58 billion. The Senate’s budget originally matched the $58 billion request, but later adopted an amendment that pushes that figure up by a whopping additional $38 billion. Interestingly enough, the budget the House passed last year called for total OCO spending of $38 billion in this upcoming fiscal year.

This huge increase in OCO spending has virtually nothing to do with emergencies or ongoing military activities – it is a naked ploy to circumvent budget caps and spend more money on defense programs.

If Congress wants to spend more on defense, it can stick to the budget caps by making spending reductions elsewhere. Yet, they are not only refusing to pursue corresponding cuts elsewhere in the budget, but actually moving in the opposite direction. This week, House leadership is reportedly removing a provision that calls for billions of dollars in spending offsets.

Advertisement

The attitude toward budgeting displayed by both chambers of Congress with their current blueprints is irresponsible and, for fiscal conservatives, should be absolutely unacceptable. As the House and Senate work on their budgets this week, we will see if Congress will listen to the voice of the taxpayers or if politicians will remain deaf to the need for fiscal responsibility.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement