Redstate...
The
Unanswered Questions for GOP
Leaders from Freshmen
What about Paul Ryan’s budget?
Posted by Daniel Horowitz
Sunday,
July 24th
Forget
the tax issue or the timetable
for a moment; any proposed “spending cut” deal that fails to slash
funding for
discretionary spending and welfare programs to pre-Obama levels, as
proposed in
Paul Ryan’s budget, is worthless.
As
Congressman Dennis Ross (R-FL) tweeted earlier today, “debt “deals”
that count
on 10 years worth of spending cuts are the Mr Snuffleupagus of budget
tricks.
No one sees them except pols.”
If
House leaders fail to stand by
their own budget, freshmen members like Ross might pose the following
question:
was the entire Republican majority of the 112th Congress a waste of
time?
A
record number of freshmen
Republicans were swept into Congress to downsize government in general,
and
repeal/defund Obamacare in particular.
In
April, Republicans had their first
chance to fulfill their mandate by passing a continuing resolution for
FY 2011
that slashed government and defunded Obamacare.
As the clock ticked down to a government
shutdown, GOP leaders retreated
in fear. They
forced the conference to
pass a spending bill that maintained funding for Obamacare and only
trimmed a
paltry $352 million from the deficit, thereby abrogating their popular
mandate
from just five months before.
But
we were told that the CR was not
our fight, and that we should remain patient until we are presented
with real
opportunities; the debt ceiling fight and the Paul Ryan budget for FY
2012.
The
Ryan budget, unlike the impending
debt ceiling deal, more or less fulfills the mandate of the 2010
freshmen by
defunding Obamacare and downsizing government to pre-Obama levels. This is not the RSC plan
or a Tea Party plan;
it is the plan of the entire conference, supported by leadership. Ever since the budget
resolution was adopted
on April 15, the House has worked diligently to carry out the budget
blueprint
and implement comprehensive cuts in every appropriations bill.
But
what will come of all those cuts,
including Obamacare, when the rubber meets the road in late September?
If
GOP leaders could not expend their
political capital and fulfill their mandate through the 2011 CR for
fear of a
gov’t shutdown; if they will not hold the line with the debt limit on
August 2
for fear of default, will they hold the line on the Ryan budget on
September
30? Will they
suddenly exhibit newfound
courage in the face of a government shutdown, or was the entire Ryan
budget
just a charade? They
certainly won’t
have more fortitude when we reach the next debt limit under this new
“two-tiered debt ceiling plan.”
When
will the conservatives deliver on
their promise to defund Obamacare?
An
overwhelming majority of voters
support repeal of Obamacare; 66% of adults support Cut, Cap, and
Balance; 74%
of adults support a balanced budget amendment.
Throughout the debt negotiations, Obama has
incurred record disapproval,
while the GOP has made gains among the young and the poor – those most
affected
by Obama’s pernicious policies.
If
such resounding support is not
enough for them to pull the trigger, they will never have the guts to
engage in
brinkmanship over the Ryan budget in September.
There will be no other “bites at the apple” if
Democrats know that
Republicans will never force the issue.
The
bottom line is that Democrats will
never willingly sell out, and will go to the brink for their principles. If Republicans don’t match
their
intransigence with a parallel degree of gumption, all of their promises
will
remain empty.
Those
conservative freshmen will have
nothing to show their constituents beyond a non-binding commission and
unenforceable baseline spending cuts.
In
order to preclude such
disappointment, GOP leaders must hold the line on Cut, Cap, and Balance. Additionally, they should
opt for a
“two-tiered” approach by bringing the Full Faith and Credit Act to the
House
floor, along with CCB. This
would force
the Treasury to prioritize its payments to our soldiers and Social
Security
recipients. Consequently,
any default
that ensues would be Obama’s prerogative.
To
that end, our good freshmen won’t
find themselves pondering this depressing question:
Is there any purpose of assuming power other
than for its own sake?
Read
it at Redstate
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