The Pak Banker

McCarthy's concession­s to transform Lower House

- Rep. Josh Brecheen

Many Americans were shocked to learn this month about the concentrat­ed power in the House of Representa­tives that undermines our constituti­onal republic.

Since 2016, the Speaker of the House has allowed zero votes on floor-offered amendments, unless they were pre-screened. Instead, members of Congress were forced to vote "yes" or "no" on legislatio­n, often being forced to swallow wasteful, pork-ridden provisions that were buried inside bills.

This backwards process has led Congress to pass massive trillion dollar omnibus bills -sometimes as long as 4,000 pages - right before Christmas when many members are eager to fly home to be with their families.

This endless cycle of omnibus spending has led America's economy to be headed towards a fiscal cliff. Inflation may have slowed last month, but prices still have increased by 6.5 percent over the last 12 months - far past the

Federal Reserve's target of 2 percent for a healthy economy.

And then there is our national debt, which now stands at more than $31 trillion. That means that as of today each taxpayer is on the hook for more than $246,000. If we continue this nasty habit of spending money we don't have, economists predict our national debt will hit $41 trillion by 2026.

According to the Congressio­nal Budget Office, we are expected to be spending a trillion dollars annually just in interest-money flushed down the toiletby the end of this decade.

With the next Speaker of the House hanging in the balance and a slim majority, there was no better time than now for economic conservati­ves to change how Congress operates and put an end to the seemingly perpetual cycle of reck- less omnibus spending.

One of the few things that all Americans can agree on is that Washington is broken. I said throughout my campaign that I was not just running for Congress, but I was running to reform Congress.

I used to work for the late Sen. Dr. Tom Coburn of Oklahoma. Back when he was in the House under the "Contract with America," any member of Congress could amend spending bills from the floor and go after ridiculous pork hidden in bills. I want to return Congress to those days, which happens to be the last time America had a balanced budget.

That is why I was proud to join the "tenacious twenty" who demanded change to the status quo during the Speaker election of Kevin McCarthy. The results were nothing short of transforma­tive. In fact, one member who has been in Congress for the past 10 years remarked to me that these concession­s will result in the biggest positive changes in Washington he has seen since he has been there.

Here are the details of the new Republican rules package and some other conservati­ve concession­s that the "tenacious twenty," using their leverage in negotiatio­ns, helped bring about: Commits the House to a process allowing rank-and-file members to offer spending cut amendments from the floor on all general appropriat­ion bills. No floor derived amendments have been allowed under an "open rule" in six years which has left members unable to fully legislate but only vote "yes" or "no" on bills that could be majorly improved. Requires single subject bills instead of bills purposeful­ly loaded with mixed subjects designed to camouflage bad provisions.

Creates a framework that forces Congress back to setting a budget and utilizing appropriat­ions bills, instead of continuing reliance on omnibus bills. Grants a full 72 hours minimum to members to read bills. Commits the House to balancing the budget in 10 years. A debt ceiling increase must be tied to spending cuts.

As Scottish historian and professor Alexander Tytler once said, "A democracy cannot exist as a permanent form of government. It can only exist until the voters discover that they can vote themselves largesse from the public treasury."

Well, right now our nation is in grave danger. I have long believed that economic security is national security and our years of reckless spending have made us vulnerable.

‘‘The results were nothing short of transforma­tive. In fact, one member who has been in Congress for the past 10 years remarked to me that these concession­s will result in the biggest positive changes in Washington he has seen since he has been there.”

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