Get Ready For Another Budget Battle


When Republicans caved on raising the debt limit last year, we referred to the final Boehner proposal as a ground ball into a double play.  Not only did Boehner fail to secure any transformational change in exchange for raising the debt ceiling (except for cutting the military), he actually obviated our leverage in future budget battles.

As part of the debt limit agreement, Congress passed the Budget [out of] Control Act, which totally abrogated the discretionary spending levels set under the much vaunted Ryan budget.  In fact, it hindered our leverage over budget battles for the next ten years.  For FY 2012, the BCA set the discretionary spending level at $1.043 trillion, $24 billion above the Ryan budget. [Ultimately, due to non-offset emergency spending, they wound up spending $1.053 trillion.]  For this coming fiscal year, the BCA set budget authority at $1.047 trillion (not including emergency spending), $19 billion above the level established in the Ryun budget for FY 2013.

To be clear, there is nothing stopping Republicans from rectifying their mistake and setting discretionary spending levels lower than those specified in the BCA.  It’s just that many Republicans, as predicted, are squeamish about going back on their commitment to Democrats.  Some of our buddies on the appropriations committee are already contemplating a House budget that mirrors the BCA spending levels:

Not passing a budget is also undesirable for the House GOP, as it has pilloried Senate Democrats for deciding not to pass a budget resolution this year and for relying on the Budget Control Act.

“That’s problematic. We might not pass a budget, who knows?” said Rep. Mike Simpson (R-Idaho), a Member of both the Budget and Appropriations committees.

Some Republicans on the panel, such as Simpson, want to pass a budget in line with July’s Budget Control Act, which set spending levels for fiscal 2013 at
$1.047 trillion. Conservatives, on the other hand, want to bring the number down to fall in line with House Budget Chairman Paul Ryan’s original number of about $1.028 trillion. […]

“If you’ve got a group of people that are going to vote ‘no’ no matter what because any money is too much money, then you’re going to need Democratic support, and that means the number has to go — guess what? — up to [$1.047 trillion],” said Rep. Tom Cole (R-Okla.), a member of both the Budget and Appropriations committees. […]

“We all know that once it gets down to negotiations with the Senate, it will be done within that framework,” he said. “If the Budget Control Act says [$1.047 trillion], that’s where you’re going to be. Do you really want to structure something that you know you’re not going to hit that number, pass it, and then at the end of the day look like you caved in the fall by going up to [$1.047 trillion]?”

Congressman Cole, the only reason “we’re not going to hit that number” is because people like you – the ones who bequeathed us with the BCA – will cave again.

There is also another complication in the budget process as a result of the impending sequestration.  Fiscal year 2013 runs from October 1, 2012 to September 30, 2012, but starting in calendar year 2013, the automatic sequestration will take effect.  According to CBO, there will be an automatic rescission of $97 billion in across-the-board discretionary spending from any level of spending set at the beginning of the fiscal year.  Roughly 50% of the cuts will be incurred by the military.  The FY 2013 budget offers Republicans the opportunity to kill two birds with one stone by parrying the cuts away from the military and onto the destructive branches of government.

Here’s what they should do:  Start with the $1.028 trillion topline figure under the Ryan budget, and cut $97 billion off of non-security discretionary spending at the beginning of the year.  In other words, they should set the topline figure at $931 billion.  Where will they find the $112 billion in non-security cuts?  There’s no dearth of options.  We can cut the departments of Education, Commerce, Green Energy, and HUD (roughly $163 billion).  Oh, and we can also devolve most highway spending back to the states, saving $50 billion a year.  There’s also plenty of low-hanging fruit within Agriculture, Labor, and HHS.

Hey, as conservatives, we believe in forgiveness and second chances.  House Republicans have another chance to get it right.  On the other hand, the congressional primaries are just around the corner.  We need more members with the fighting spirit of Andrew Breitbart, not the surrender spirit of Mitch McConnell.

Cross-posted from The Madison Project


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8 Comments Leave a comment

So. How do we put the more waffly Reps on notice?

acat (Diary) Thursday, March 1st at 12:14PM EDT (link)

I know which of ‘em to call.. and this can help find yours

Mew

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self-portrait

Caveat Suffragator

Cave...

neoavatara (Diary) Thursday, March 1st at 12:20PM EDT (link)

Cave, cave, cave.

Republicans will cave. Does anyone doubt this?

I have no faith left in this bunch.

Let them prove me wrong.

www.neoavatara.com/blog

They're certain to prove you right if you say nothing, neoavatara...

acat (Diary) Thursday, March 1st at 2:22PM EDT (link)

Dial. The. Phone.

Mew

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self-portrait

Caveat Suffragator

 
 

There is really only one way to make an effective call to your Republican legislator

ColdWarrior (Diary) Thursday, March 1st at 12:52PM EDT (link)

acat, I know you already know all this. The following is for those who don’t. I have often said here there’s really not much point in calling your legislators unless you can somehow convince them that you have the power to mount a successful primary challenge against them. I advocate those who take the time communicating their views with their congresscritters begin by stating the following:

I am a conservative Republican Party precinct committeeman and I am recruiting every conservative I can to come into the Party with me as a precinct committeeman for the sole purpose of making sure you and all like you who do not uphold your oath of office will not be returned to office in the next election

or

I am a conservative Republican and I am taking steps to become a precinct committeeman and I am recruiting every conservative I can to come into the Party with me as a precinct committeeman for the sole purpose of making sure you and all like you who do not uphold your oath of office will not be returned to office in the next election.

And here’s a link to Erick E.’s post about “Project Coup”/The Neighborhood Precinct Committeeman Strategy which contains a lot of good information, including in the comments:

http://www.redstate.com/erick/2011/01/04/now-is-the-time-today-is-the-day-lets-have-a-coup/

I hope someone finds this information useful.

Thank you.

ColdWarrior

In 2012, will YOU become a “voting member” of the Republican Party in your precinct?

Where it all started. Twitter @kaltkrieger
Learn how to GOTV at The Concord Project and at Procinct and Unified Patriots.

5s, Coldwarrior.

acat (Diary) Thursday, March 1st at 2:23PM EDT (link)

Right on time as usual.

Mew

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self-portrait

Caveat Suffragator

 
 
 

Good to see

papayapicker Thursday, March 1st at 1:39PM EDT (link)

the Republicans are already hoisting the white flags of surrender.

 

Good time to once again

DerKrieger (Diary) Thursday, March 1st at 2:12PM EDT (link)

…shill for a return to federalism. We simpy can’t trust the national GOP. Far better to eject strong 10th Amendment conservative super majorities at the state evel who will SEIZE back the powers usurped by the federal government. A block of Red states working together can effectively gut the federal government of its unconstitutional power. What if the 26 states suing the Feds over Obaacare instead just said tat they would not only not implement it but that they would revert ts implementation by the Feds within their borders. It woud collapse.

Take your eggs out of the national basket and redstribute some to your states. They should be our bulwark against the runaway federal government.

“In questions of power, let no more be heard of confidence in man, but bind him down from mischief by the chains of the Constitution.” – Thomas Jefferson

“I cannot undertake to lay my finger on that article of the Constitution which granted a right to Congress of expending, on objects of benevolence, the money of their constituents.” – James Madison

Whenever the legislators endeavor to take away and destroy the property of the people, or to reduce them to slavery under arbitrary power, they put themselves into a state of war with the people, who are thereupon absolved from any further obedience.” — John Locke, 1690

 

I am so impressed.

kestrel (Diary) Friday, March 2nd at 2:48PM EDT (link)

Tom Cole (R-Okla) wants to avoid caving on the budget in the fall by just going ahead and caving now.

Fortunately, I think there are increasing numbers of sober congressmembers who not only see a problem with the government borrowing 40 cents of every dollar, but realize that John Boehner has been leading them into poor voting records that are at odds with their constituents’ desire for government to stop spending our kids and grandkids into oblivion.

If Mr. Boehner would rather pass a bad budget with the Democrats than require of them modest spending cuts, I guess we can’t stop him from doing that, but I sure hope we retire him from the Speakership in 2013. Many of these veteran congressmembers are just incapable of realizing the sea change that Obama has produced in the electorate.

The American people are miles ahead of the politicians in understanding how fast we must flee from Big Government Control of our lives (which feeds on massive spending). To understand this, go to this page at the Mackinaw Center and scroll down to “A Brief Explanation of the Overton Window”.

The idea is that public opinion drives a window of politically feasible options on any topic — that is, options that politicians can enact, and still be re-elected. The window slides on a scale of policy options that range from “least government intervention/most freedom” to “most government intervention/least freedom”. (Look at the example on education, and move the window yourself to get the idea.)

I submit that the “window” on many issues has gone crashing toward the “less government intervention” side of the scale, unperceived by politicians who have been too long immersed in Washington. (The resurgence of 10th amendment/states’ rights issues is one illustration of the shift.) These Establishment politicians have no idea just how odious ‘business as usual” in Washington has become to average people, who don’t have waivers or privileged legal exemptions from the vast destruction being wrought by this government.

Get with the Freedom agenda, Republicans, or get out.