FOX News Sunday host Chris Wallace began by interviewing Sen. John McCain (R-AZ). McCain declared the budget to be massive generational theft, said we should let more banks fail and GM enter bankruptcy, and promised to help Obama’s housing plan pass.
Next Wallace spoke with Gov. Tim Kaine (D-VA), the new Chairman of the DNC. Kaine defended Treasury Secretary Geithner and walked through four elements of Obama’s plan to solve the financial crisis, and said the financial rescue will be more difficult than an economic stimulus plan because it must be globally coordinated.
George Stephanopoulos hosted a roundtable of Sen. Claire McCaskill (D-MO), Sen. Evan Bayh (D-IN), Sen. Richard Shelby (R-AL), and President Tom Donohue of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce on ABC’s This Week. McCaskill said to be patient and let the stimulus package realize effects and that there is a psychological lag to the state of the economy. Shelby declared TARP a failure and said we must not have a TARP II. Donohue disagreed, noting that TARP’s main objective was injecting liquidity, which he said succeeded. Bayh argued that a company too big to fail must operate under a different set of rules and also that the budget bill is too large.
Host David Gregory met with Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC) and Sen. Chuck Schumer (D-NY) on NBC’s Meet the Press. Graham began lauding the Fed’s TALF plan to get credit flowing again. Schumer walks through three main points of Obama’s economic recovery plan – stimulus, foreclosure abatement, and financial reform – and blamed the severity of this mess on consumer confidence and eight years of spending more than we earned.
Schumer described two types of nationalization – good nationalization and bad nationalization – and said Republicans are touting the policies of Herbert Hoover and want to return to the “Reagan days.” Despite having 37 earmarks, Graham wants the spending bill to be vetoed because of earmarks.
White House Budget Director Peter Orszag was first on the lineup for host Bob Schieffer on CBS’s Face the Nation. Orszag described the GOP alternative to the budget as one of tax cuts for the wealthy and corporations, a Medicare program that covers 80% of healthcare cost, and a social security plan that invests in the stock market. He said the Obama administration is like a “relief pitcher stepping into the ninth inning” with the 2009 budget and that they will start fresh with the 2010 budget.
Rep. John Boehner (R-OH) was Schieffer’s other guest. He said the government needs to lead by example by freezing spending.

