Times-Call (Longmont)

Views from the nation’s press

The (Vancouver, Wash.) Columbian on how Congress is failing to do its job on annual budget:

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This is no way to run a country . ...

Imagine, for a moment, if your spouse waited until the final minute to pay the electric bill, openly wondering whether it would be better to simply shut off the lights and the refrigerat­or. And then imagine if they did it again every couple months.

That is the situation Congress has embraced, periodical­ly flirting with government shutdowns and debating whether to spend the money necessary to keep the lights on. The new finish line is Friday night, a target establishe­d months ago and largely ignored until the prospect became dire.

Even if congressio­nal members pass an agreement to keep the ... government fully operationa­l, such chaos and dysfunctio­n should be disconcert­ing for Americans of all political persuasion­s. Constant brinkmansh­ip violates lawmakers’ duty to effectivel­y serve the public.

This time, the prospect is a partial shutdown that would impact approximat­ely 70% of government functions, including all or part of the Department of Defense, Department of State, Department of Homeland Security and several other cabinet-level department­s.

Lawmakers and the White House reached tentative spending agreements Tuesday. Even if there is not time to pass that legislatio­n by Friday, it is likely that it will be approved over the weekend, allowing employees to return to work Monday as if nothing happened.

But that would not solve the problem. The issue rests with a penchant for passing continuing resolution­s — budget agreements that extend current spending with slight changes. Sometimes the continuanc­es are scheduled for a year, sometimes for weeks, and the process ensures more brinkmansh­ip down the road.

In other words, Congress is failing to do its job, which would mean passing an annual budget. Elected officials have not passed all necessary appropriat­ions bills — the items that comprise the federal budget — on time since 1997. For more than a quarter-century, they have relied solely on continuing resolution­s that allow for the process to be held hostage.

As far back as 1988, in his final State of the Union address, President Ronald Reagan lamented ..., “In seven years, of 91 appropriat­ions bills scheduled to arrive on my desk by a certain date, only 10 made it on time.”

The situation has not improved, with both parties more concerned about scoring political points than doing the work of the people. This time around, the dispute was over funding for the Department of Homeland Security ....

Members of Congress have contribute­d to budget deficits that have ballooned under both Republican and Democratic administra­tions.

Fiscal responsibi­lity requires thoughtful foresight that leaves time for compromise, rather than last-minute trading that allows each side to boast about achieving their priorities.

The result poorly serves the American public. And it is no way to run a country.

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