The Day

GOP preps for budget fight with Democrats

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of the House.

President Barack Obama played it safe when he released his spending blueprint last month for the budget year that begins Oct. 1. It calls for tax increases on wealthier earners and modest spending curbs. But it would not address the spiraling costs of Medicare and Medicaid, the health care plan for the poor and disabled.

Last year’s GOP measure proposed replacing Medicare fee-for-service payments to doctors and hospitals with a voucher- like program in which the government would subsidize purchases of health insurance on the private market.

Democrats said the subsidies would not keep up with inflation in medical costs and would shift costs to older people, and they accused Republican­s of plotting to “end Medicare as we know it.”

The uproar was an important factor in a special election in which Democrats seized a longstandi­ng Gopheld House seat in upstate New York. Republican­s showed less enthusiasm for the plan after that.

Ryan has since come out with a less stringent version of the measure, in concert with Sen. Ron Wyden, D-ore., that would keep the traditiona­l Medicare “fee for service” program as an option along with private insurance plans. It features more realistic inflation increases, but promises less savings for the government than last year’s measure.

“This coming debt crisis is the most predictabl­e crisis we’ve ever had in this country,” Ryan said in a video statement.

“This is why we’re acting. This is why we’re leading. This is why we’re proposing — and passing out of the House — a budget to fix this problem: So we can save our country for ourselves and our children’s future.”

Ryan has yet to disclose the specifics of his plan. But the committee announced Saturday that Ryan would introduce the proposal Tuesday; that would allow his committee to sign off on it by the end of the week.

Pressure from conservati­ve lawmakers has prompted GOP leaders and Ryan to reopen last summer’s budget pact and impose further cuts on domestic agencies such as the department­s of Education, Energy and Housing and Urban Developmen­t.

Last year’s deal with Obama set a $ 1.047 trillion cap on the annual operating budgets of Cabinet department­s and other agencies for the upcoming 2013 budget year.

GOP aides say Republican leaders want to cut that figure by $19 billion, or almost 2 percent, leading to protests from Democrats that Republican­s are going back on the deal. The move would make it more difficult to pass follow-up spending bills setting agency budgets for new fiscal year.

The annual budget debate is conducted under arcane rules. The main budget document, called a budget resolution, is a nonbinding measure that sets the parameters for follow-up legislatio­n on spending and taxes. Even though its broader goals usually are not put into place, it is viewed as a statement of party principles.

Democrats controllin­g the Senate do not want a budget debate. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D- Nev., has said he will instead rely on language he inserted in a budget pact last year that allows for floor action on the annual spending bills without a budget resolution.

By avoiding a budget debate, Reid protects several vulnerable incumbent Democrats from politicall­y dangerous votes.

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