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No Debt
Limit Expansion without Spending Cuts! By Dick Morris & Eileen McGann
Every Republican member of Congress should sign the following pledge,
being promulgated by Grover Norquist’s Americans for Tax Reform:
“I promise not to vote for any expansion of the federal debt limit
unless it is preceded or accompanied by significant cuts in federal
spending.”
We all know that the reason the federal government debt is exploding is
the reckless spending policies of the Obama Administration. From
the time George Washington took the oath of office to the time Barack
Obama did, Washington borrowed $9 trillion. Since Obama took
office, two years ago, we have borrowed almost $5 trillion
more! Domestic discretionary spending (non-defense) has
risen by an astonishing 41% in two years!!! Welfare
spending, primarily Medicaid, has gone up by 54% in two years!!!!
We must roll back these increases. (It is not increases in Social
Security - 14% -- or Medicare -16% that are the problem).
Obama will never allow spending cuts unless they are jammed down his
throat and his need for an expansion of his borrowing authority are the
key chance to do so.
House Speaker John Boehner sounded an ominous note of possible
capitulation even before the first shot was fired when he said “We’re
going to have to deal with it [raising the debt limit] as adults.
Whether we like it or not, the federal government has obligations and
we have obligations on our part.”
Obligations? Sure. But don’t we also have the obligation to stop
the crazy spending even as we allow the debt limit to rise to pay for
the spending that is already underway? Is this not the perfect
time to demand spending restraint?
The American people will strongly support the spending restrictions as
a precondition for raising the debt limit. Most don’t want the
limit raised at all. But almost everyone will see the wisdom of
cutting the spending as we raise the debt limit.
Obama will resist and, if he vetoes the spending cuts, he - not the
Republican House - will bear the onus for the ensuing government
default. And he will blink just like he did over extending the
Bush tax cuts.
What spending cuts? Nothing complicated. The most important
one is to roll back domestic discretionary spending to pre-Obama levels
- 2008 levels - and freeze it there for three years. This step
would cut the deficit by over $100 billion for each of the next three
years (and, if we take the step now, for this year as well). Let
the federal agencies figure out what to cut. But force them to
make these cuts.
We all lived pretty well in 2008 before the 41% hike in domestic
discretionary spending (on things like transportation, Congress, EPA,
Justice, Education, Energy, etc). Let’s go back to those days and
erase the legacy of the Obama stimulus package.
And we should also take two other steps:
(a) Transform Medicaid into a block grant to the states giving
them the flexibility to spend it as they wish. Roll Medicaid back
to 2008 levels and include a modest annual inflator for increasing
costs of about 3%.
(b) And, we should only increase the debt limit by $500 billion
(about three months worth) so as to keep Obama on a short leash and
make him keep coming back for more while we add restrictions and new
cuts each time.
Republicans need to be smart to leverage their one-house control into
real accomplishments and there is no better place to start than with
the debt limit vote next month.
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