The Congressional Fiscal 2014 Budget Conference Committee met for the first time last week. It is a bipartisan, bicameral committee that includes all members of the Senate Budget Committee, and the Chairman and Ranking Members on the House side, is about even politically, with 15 Democrats and 14 Republicans, but is heavily weighted towards the Senate, with 22 senators and seven representatives.
The budget reform panel was mandated in the bill that raised
the debt ceiling and ended the government shutdown, and has until December 13
to find a budget compromise or face the likelihood of another government
shutdown in mid-January when funding for the government runs out.
The group is reportedly focused on finding ways to replace
across the board spending cuts, known as sequestration, with more sensible
reductions in federal largess.
Representative Paul Ryan (R-Wisc.) is chair of the joint
committee, and in opening remarks said that the debt held by the public has
doubled in just the last 5 years and is only getting worse. It’s a drag on the
economy, he said. With 10,000 Baby Boomers retiring every day, Medicare and
Social Security are going broke.
The debt, he said, hurts economic growth and job creation,
and noted the message from the Congressional Budget Office, which warned that
if something isn’t done soon, there will be a debt crisis. “We’ve got to get a
handle on our debt, and we have got to get a handle on it now,” he stated, and
the way he believes we must work our way out of this is through tax reform,
including getting rid of carve-outs and kickbacks, and through a growing
economy, and not by raising taxes.
The federal budget is a huge mess. In FY2013 the federal
government took in revenue of $2.8 trillion, but spent $3.5 trillion, and owes
$17 trillion to debt holders.
This compares to a family of four that earns $36,000
annually, but spends $45,000 each year and has accumulated debt totaling
$219,000. This family clearly needs to cut down on its spending.
But the federal government cannot do that. At least not if
we believe House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-Cal.), who said in an
interview in September on CNN’s “State of the Union” that “The cupboard is
bare. There’s (sic) no more cuts to make. It’s really important that people
understand that.”
Ms. Pelosi is apparently unaware that the federal government spent your tax dollars on such
important things as exotic dancers, robotic squirrels, studying pig poop, and a
reality TV show in India.
And she also doesn’t know about the Government Accountability Office
estimate of roughly $17 billion of improper Medicare payments each year, or the
billions of dollars of mismanagement, corruption, and wasteful spending in
federal housing subsidies, and the fraud and abuse in the food stamp program,
school lunch, and child care programs, and in Veteran’s Affairs.
Maybe
she’s forgotten that we pay people with our tax dollars at the NSA to record
terabytes of information about us, and IRS employees to harass Republican/conservative
organizations applying for non-profit status, and federal SWAT teams to kick
down the doors of people whose student loans are in arrears and besiege a mine
operation in Alaska to check for compliance with the Clean Water Act.
And
then there are the 31 areas of spending on duplicative federal programs,
spelled out in a report by the Government Accountability Office that waste
billions annually, such as at least 23 different federal agencies running
hundreds of programs to support renewable energy, and the 29 Department of
Homeland Security contracts that partly or completely overlapped with research
being done by another part of the same department.
Despite these examples of waste, fraud and abuse, and also
despite the record $2.8 trillion in revenue the federal treasury collected in
FY2013 – which provided President Barack Obama the opportunity to claim credit
for a sizeable reduction in the annual budget deficit – Nancy Pelosi thinks
that in negotiations about debt reduction “revenue needs to be on the table.”
But, no, Ms. Pelosi. You and your big spending comrades
don’t get another dime.
Before the middle class or even the wealthiest Americans are
further burdened with additional taxes, the federal government needs to get its
act together and start operating efficiently. It must eliminate the billions of
dollars in waste, fraud and abuse, and eliminate duplication.
Taxes should be evenly applied and high enough to support
only essential government services. And, the most important word in that
concept is “essential.”
Congress must get rid of carve-outs and kickbacks, eliminate
pork barrel projects, stop the unconstitutional passing of Congressional
responsibility to Executive Branch agencies, and restrict legislative activity
to necessary and useful laws.
And the federal government must begin to operate with an
attitude that demonstrates the obligation every federal worker – from the
President of the United States, to Cabinet Secretaries, to Members of Congress,
to the lowest paid employee – owes to the people they work for, the taxpayers.
Perhaps then each of them will earn through job performance the high status
some of them assume they are due “just because” they hold
a high elective or appointed position.
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