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Never Let a Good Crisis Go to Waste

Here’s a not-so-bold prediction: Congress will vote to spend more money today than it will cut over 10 years from any grand deal.

Later today, the House will consider the additional $50 billion in Sandy aid in two parts (they already passed another $9.7 billion two weeks ago). The House will first try to pass a bill (H.R. 152) to provide about $17 billion to address the ‘more immediate’ recovery needs, including money for FEMA’s disaster relief fund. Sandy has caused the fund’s balance to drop to $3.94 billion as of Dec. 31, from more than $7 billion on Oct. 1.  There are no significant reforms in this bill to ensure that we don’t continue throwing money down a rat hole. Moreover, in addition to the FEMA money, this bill contains more funding for the failed Head Start program, as if that is critical for Sandy relief.

So how much of this package – the more immediate needs – will be expended beyond FY 2015? 51%

Then the House will consider an amendment, sponsored by Rep. Rodney Frelinghuysen (R-N.J.), which will include a $33.7 billion long-term package, containing much of the extraneous spending that passed the Senate. $12.2 billion is for the Community Development Block Grant, which is nothing more than a multi-purpose account for states to use on any project.  Why not use a disaster to promote HUD special interest activities?

80% of the spending in this bill will occur after FY 2015.

Conservatives offered numerous amendments that would have limited the scope of the bill to necessary and immediate disaster spending, offset all new spending, and provided measures for FEMA.  Rep. Mick Mulvaney (R-SC) proposed an amendment that would have offset the $17 billion package by eliminating direct subsidies to farmers, outstanding TARP spending, and transit subsidies for federal employees.  Rep. Tom McClintock proposed an amendment that would have eliminated all long-term funding that does not deal with the immediate disaster.

Unfortunately, the Rules Committee, which serves as a conduit for leadership, blocked most of these amendments (sounds like Harry Reid in the Senate) in order to shield their members from tough votes.  Overall, the amendments that were made in order would only cut a total of $200 million from the package.  As for offsets, they did make one amendment in order – a Mulvaney amendment to offset the $17 billion cost with a 1.63% cut in all discretionary accounts.  I have a sneaking suspicion that a number of members will vote for the Mulvaney amendment, and when it fails, proceed to vote for the underlying bill – without offsets.

A crisis should not be used as an opportunity to play on people’s emotions for the purpose of perpetuating bad public policy. If we don’t reform these programs now to include more privatization and state control where there will be more local accountability, we will continue down the same path with every future natural disaster.

And remember this: Congress will spend more money today than all of the new annual revenue projected to flow in to the Treasury as a result of the Obama/McConnell tax hikes

COMMENTS

  • plh

    By now it should be painfully clear to any objective, outside observer that as things stand, the Republicans really aren’t much better than the Democrats when it comes to raiding the public Treasury. They both do it, insolently and dishonestly.

  • libertynugget

    I’m guessing at some point we’re expected to be shocked by increased government spending.

    Seems pretty much the norm over the past 20+ years or so…

    There is no will to cut spending; only postulate about it.

    “Small Government” Great soundbite; no action…

  • digitalboss

    Leftists like to play on emotion. They want nothing to do with logic or reason. That is why Obama will have children on stage with him tomorrow when he tries to take our rights away.

  • Rich

    Another clear indicator that the fiscal conservatives have been rendered irrelevant by the GOP leadership as for the second time in two weeks, a major spending/appropriations Bill passes the House with majority Democrat and minority Republican support.

    It is pretty clear that Boehner et al have decided that the Hastert rule is no longer applicable when it suits them and I suspect there will be a number of other major pieces of legislation which are passed by the new moderate GOP/Democrat House that apparently currently run the House – starting with the debt ceiling no doubt.

    Whether it’s cynical politics induced by the Tea Party antics leading up to the ‘fiscal cliff’ (rejection of Plan B, the disingenous theatrical display that was no tax rises until they are tax cuts) or an acknowledgement that the last 2 years of doing things only ended up with terrible publicity for the GOP but the same effective results as they are still getting, either way this is going to be a pretty frustrating time for fiscal conservatives unless they can heal the divisions in the GOP and come together with a position they can unite behind.