The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

Editorial

Congressio­nal Republican­s are anything but fiscally responsibl­e

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On May 17, the United States Senate overwhelmi­ngly rejected a plan from Sen. Rand Paul, R-Kentucky, to balance the federal budget.

The proposal, which called for balancing the budget over the next five years by cutting spending by $13 trillion over the next decade, was voted down with only 21 votes in favor and 76 opposed.

Paul took to Twitter to argue that Democrats and Republican­s have made “an unholy alliance” to ramp up spending on each others desired priorities, with Republican­s always clamoring for more military spending and Democrats more welfare spending.

With the United States national debt now above $21 trillion, and the nonpartisa­n Congressio­nal Budget Office projecting trillion dollar-plus annual deficits over the next decade, it certainly seems that way.

For all of their limited government and fiscally conservati­ve rhetoric, the Republican-controlled Congress has, to date, been anything but fiscally responsibl­e. They have on the whole been revealed to be merely tax-cut-and-spend Republican­s who want to take credit for reducing federal revenues with tax cuts while doing nothing to contain spending on the other side of things.

With the CBO projecting deficits as high as $1.5 trillion a year over the next decade, even after assuming continued economic growth, it should be apparent to anyone with an elementary understand­ing of how math and finance works that something has to be done to alter this trajectory.

But with House Speaker Paul Ryan’s inability to get any traction on entitlemen­t reform even among fellow Republican­s and general unwillingn­ess on the part of congressio­nal leadership to scale back America’s perpetual wars abroad, it’s hard to see anything meaningful being done on this front.

For instance, while Congress should be talking about ending our failed nation-building exercise in Afghanista­n, which now costs at least $45 billion a year to continue, Republican leaders prefer to tinker at the margins.

Instead of taking on the big problems, instead of taking seriously their talk of free markets and limited government, the latest iteration of the farm bill was just another pork-filled, expensive giveaway to wealthy farmers on one end and a continuati­on of the costly food stamp program on the other.

Consistent with their preference for taking on politicall­y easy reforms, congressio­nal Republican­s seem inclined to back mandating job training for food stamp recipients partly in the name of saving money. But as the Cato Institute has pointed out, most of the savings from that move ends up being offset by billions of dollars in spending needed to then pay for that job training.

Either Republican­s actually believe their rhetoric on free markets, limited government and fiscal responsibi­lity or they don’t. At this point, it’s clear the GOP will continue to be unable to live up to its rhetoric and actually limit the far reach and big spending of the federal government.

That’s a state of affairs that has to be corrected. It is a shame that those principles have been sullied by the political cowardice of the Republican leadership.

— Los Angeles Daily News,

Digital First Media

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