I'm Stunned USA Today Published This Op-Ed From a Dem About Trump's State...
This Always Happens With These Anti-ICE Stories in the Media
This State's Lawmakers Are Pushing a Bill That Would Ban Facial Recognition Technology
Top Baton Rouge Aide Indicted for Stealing Taxpayer Funds in 'Kickback' Scheme
This Is What Marco Rubio Said When Asked About North Korea
What Will Stop the Iranian Regime's Oppression and Murder of Its People?
The Media Once Scolded Us for Using a Certain Label They Now Love
Illegal Alien Hurt Three Kids While Evading Arrest. Guess Who the Mayor Blames.
California Dems Took Nearly $1B From a Solar Panel Project to Build a...
Vice President Vance Destroyed Tony Evers for Refusing to Help Clean Up Fraud...
JD Vance Says There Is ‘No Chance’ of Prolonged War as US Warships...
Here's How Mamdani's Snow Shoveling Program is Going
Steve Hilton's CalDOGE Says It Uncovered Over $900M in State Fraud in Second...
What the World Needs Now
Illinois Pair Convicted in $5 Million Multistate Pyramid Scheme Case
OPINION

Big Spending Trump

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.
Big Spending Trump
AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite

Last week, I tallied Joe Biden's spending plans. This week, President Trump's.

Which presidential candidate will bankrupt America first?

When Donald Trump ran for president, he promised "big league" spending cuts.

Advertisement

Once in office, he again said he'd cut the budget, adding, "There's a lot of fat in there."

There sure is.

Since I was born, spending has grown faster than inflation most every year.

Then, President Obama, as Trump liked to out, "put more debt on than all other presidents of the United States combined!"

It's true.

But then Trump increased the debt just as much.

Now even more, with the COVID-19 spending.

One of his first biggest increases was the $738 billion defense spending bill. Trump bragged that it was "an all-time record!" He said Democrats had "depleted" our fighting ability, so he "had" to "fix our military."

"The 'fix' looks a whole lot like bloated defense spending," says Pete Sepp of the National Taxpayers Union. "It's more than our rivals around the world could even hope to spend."

Sepp's organization has fought government spending for decades. Sadly, they've had little success.

Now federal spending will grow even faster because:

1) The COVID-19 "stimulus" will grow.

2) Both political parties love spending your money.

3) Old people like me keep living longer.

Sorry about that last one. But I, rudely, decline to die.

Soon, my generation's Medicare and Social Security checks will crowd out everything else in the budget. (No, fellow geezers, we don't just "get back what we put in." We'll get, on average, almost triple our FICA deductions.) 

Sadly, no presidential candidate expresses much interest in addressing that: Trump promises to "protect" Social Security. Biden says he'll increase it!

Advertisement

Related:

PRESIDENT TRUMP

Trump was also eager to spend on special interests. He gave $16 billion to farmers and ranchers, $1.6 billion more to NASA and, despite government's horrible track record at "picking winners," he tried loaning $765 million to Kodak Pharmaceuticals.

After the pandemic hit, Trump joined Democrats in authorizing $6.2 trillion in new spending.

Signing that, Trump joked: "I've never signed anything with a "T" on it. I don't know if I can handle this one!" The politicians standing behind him laughed.

But it's not funny.

Now Democrats want to add even more spending.

Trump at least made some cuts, prepandemic. Sepp acknowledges that he made "important progress in reducing overhead (and) personnel costs."

He also cut the budget of his own office, plus the Departments of Labor, Education and State. Good! The State Department is bloated with 60 subdepartments, and its spending had increased at triple the rate inflation.

Still, media pundits whined about every cut. On CNN, one "expert" called the cuts to the State Department "insanity."

When Trump proposed other cuts, or just slowing the growth of government, Congress wouldn't let him. Trump's 2021 budget would still have increased spending by $39 billion. Rep. Chuck Schumer rejected that, calling it "a blueprint for destroying America!"

To sum up: What's Trump's total budget impact been?

Spending is up by more than $1 trillion a year. The national debt is over $26 trillion.

Advertisement

"Deficits and debt destroy economic growth," says Sepp.

"Nobody's talking about this stuff. You must be frustrated," I say.

"Very," he responds. "After 51 years as an organization, to see this kind of attitude and carelessness..."

When it comes to increasing spending, who is worse, Trump or Biden?

"Biden," replies Sepp, because he promises $1.2 trillion a year in new spending.

"We're already trillions in the hole. He's spending money out of an empty pocket!"

And Biden is favored to win.

Of course, some argue that when it comes to Republicats and Democans spending your and your grandkids' money, it doesn't matter who wins.

"Washington just seems to grow at the expense of everyone else, no matter who is in power," concludes Sepp.

So, next week, I'll report on an alternative to Biden and Trump.

John Stossel is author of "Give Me a Break: How I Exposed Hucksters, Cheats, and Scam Artists and Became the Scourge of the Liberal Media." For other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit www.creators.com.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement