Human
Events...
House
passes Republican budget, rejects Obama plan 414-0
by Audrey
Hudson
03/29/2012
The House
Thursday passed the Republican-backed budget plan for 2013 spending
levels
after soundly defeating a half-dozen other proposals, including
President
Barack Obama’s plan, which was unanimously defeated.
The
Republican version passed on a mostly party line vote of 228 yeas and
191 nays
Thursday, and was authored by Rep. Paul Ryan (R –Wis.), chairman of the
House
Budget Committee.
“We’re
leading, we’re passing, we’re proposing a solution,” Ryan said.
“They’re
choosing the next election over the next generation,” Ryan said of the
president’s plan. “Soon, those empty promises are going to become
broken
promises. It’s time to be honest about the situation we are in and
start fixing
the problems.”
Obama’s
budget plan was offered as a substitute amendment by a Republican in an
election year ploy to embarrass Democrats. It was soundly defeated with
0 yeas
and 414 nays.
“This is a
landmark document for Democrats as we go into an election year,” said
Rep. Mick
Mulvaney (R–S.C.), who said he sponsored the president’s plan “in a
pique of
bipartisanship” after Democrats declined to do so.
“It
occurred to me something was missing from the debate. Clearly, it must
have
been an oversight,” Mulvaney said.
Obama’s
budget contained $47 trillion in government spending over the next
decade and
proposed to increase taxes by $1.9 trillion, and the gross debt at the
end of
fiscal year 2022 would stand at $25.9 trillion.
“To his
credit, the president submitted a budget, to his shame, it adds $11
trillion to
our national debt,” said Rep. Jeb Hensarling (R –Tex.), chairman of the
House
Republican Conference.
The problem
with the president’s plan -- counting on tax hikes on the rich to pay
for
unrestrained government spending -- “is that sooner or later you run
out of
rich people,” Hensarling said.
Democrats
said they voted against the amendment because it only contained the
president’s
budget numbers, and not the phonebook-sized documents of policies that
accompanied Obama’s original submittal to Congress.
“The
president’s budget takes a balanced approach to the deficit,” said Rep.
Chris
Van Hollen (D –Md.), ranking member of the House Budget Committee.
Ryan later
warned: “When you hear the word balance … hold on to your wallet -- it means tax increases.”
“You
literally cannot tax your way out of this problem,” Ryan said. “The
problem we
have here is a spending problem, that is why we propose to cut
spending.”
Rep. Tom
Graves (R –Ga.) said the president’s plan was a “vision of debt and
dependency.”
“If it was
such a good document, why didn’t (Democrats) present it?” Graves said.
“You
would think the House chamber would be full with Democrats lining up to
speak
and defend the president’s budget, but there has been much of an exodus
here.”
Ryan’s
budget proposal would set discretionary spending at $1.028 trillion for
next
year and eliminates the current $15 trillion deficit by the year 2040.
It would
also repeal ObamaCare, make changes in the tax code, and reform
Medicare.
Democrats
said their main objection to the Ryan budget was his Medicare plan and
that it
would end the Medicare guarantee of health care insurance for seniors,
with
costs now reaching $500 billion a year.
“I’m told
it polls well if you’re trying to scare senior citizens,” Ryan said.
“That this
will end Medicare as we know it is the lie of the year.”
Democrats
described the Republican budget as containing irresponsible cuts that
were
“draconian,” “reckless,” “extremely partisan,” and “shameful” that
would end up
starving children, robbing seniors and put an end to Medicare.
“They
want to give my 98-year-old mother a
voucher and tell her to go figure it out,” said Rep. Rosa DeLauro
(D–Conn.).
“This is Robin Hood in reverse.”
Added
Louise Slaughter (D–N.Y.): “The Ryan Budget is morally bankrupt and
does not
reflect the vision of a better America.”
Van Hollen
said the Republican budget is the same economic policy that got the
country
into stagnation and decline. “It is a path to greater prosperity, if
you are
already wealthy,” Van Hollen said. “Their plan rigs the rules in favor
of very
wealthy special interests.”
The
Democrats’ budget plan offered by Van Hollen emphasized job creation,
put an
end to additional tax breaks for special interests and wealthy
Americans, but
contained no Medicare reforms. It would spend $3.7 trillion but did not
explain
how it could balance the budget over time.
The
Democrats’ budget was defeated on a vote of 163 yeas to 262 nays.
The
conservative Republican Study Committee offered a budget to freeze
spending at
$931 billion until the federal budget is balanced, with a target
balanced
budget date set at 2017. It was defeated on a vote of 136 yeas to 285
nays.
“This
budget actually balances, the president’s does not,” said Mulvaney, who
also
sponsored that substitute budget.
“If you
borrow money with the intention of paying it back, it’s debt. If you
borrow
money never intending to pay it back, that is theft. And that’s what
the
president’s budget represents,” Mulvaney said.
The
Congressional Black Caucus offered its own budget, which it said would
result
in saving more than $115 billion the first year, but still make
investments in
education, job training, transportation and infrastructure, while
protecting
Social Security, Medicaid and Medicare.
Rep.
Barbara Lee (D–Calif.) called theirs a “moral document” that embodies
the
nation’s values. Rep. Sheila Jackson Lee (D–Tex.) said it would take
poor
people “off the trash heap of despair, and let them walk into glory.”
It was
defeated on a vote of 107 yeas to 314 nays.
The only
budget measure touted with bipartisan support was a deal first proposed
by the
Bowles-Simpson deficit-reduction committee, but it suffered one of the
biggest
vote failures, 38 yeas to 382 nays.
The budget
proposed by the Democrat’s Congressional Progressive Caucus was also
defeated
on a wide margin of 78 yeas to 346 nays.
Congressional
budgets are nonbinding agreements that set the guidelines for yearly
spending
and tax priorities.
Senate
Majority Leader Harry Reid (D –Nev.) says he has no intention of
bringing the
Republican plan up for a vote, which would leave Congress to operate
without a
budget for the third year in a row.
House
Speaker John Boehner was asked during a news conference before the
Republican
budget vote if he thought the various budgets offered this week would
be tossed
around as political footballs before the next election.
Boehner
recalled a recent disagreement he had with Obama, and how it would be
solved:
“The president said ‘John, this is what elections are for.’ Yes, Mr.
President,
you are correct. This is what elections are for.”
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