Albuquerque Journal

Budget debate needs to go back to basics

- E.J. DIONNE Jr. Syndicated Columnist

WASHINGTON — When President Obama releases his budget on Monday, the words “dead on arrival” will be widely incanted because they are part of a quasi-religious Beltway ritual.

This year, those words will be misleading.

No one expects Obama’s budget to be enacted as he proposes it. Republican­s responded even to early outlines of his plan with a wall of opposition. But this time around is different because, paradoxica­lly perhaps, the fact that Republican­s control both the House and Senate makes Obama’s role more rather than less important.

For the past four years, the budget game was three-cornered. The president played alongside an often radically conservati­ve Republican House and a Democratic Senate with views of its own. Now, Obama’s plan will be the main public alternativ­e to whatever the Republican­s decide to do.

Moreover, the Republican­s are responsibl­e for passing a budget through two houses, so difference­s within the GOP that could be finessed in the past will have to be dealt with openly.

The most obvious will be on whether to continue cuts in the defense budget prescribed under the so-called sequester enacted in 2011.

GOP defense advocates want to raise Pentagon spending substantia­lly, libertaria­ns want to keep both domestic and military spending low, and many mainstream conservati­ves will try to cut domestic spending even more to accommodat­e defense increases.

The third option will almost certainly be a non-starter, not only with the president — he has a veto and will insist that any cuts be balanced between the two sides of the ledger — but also with many in the GOP rank-and-file.

Obama has declined to offer premature concession­s to the Republican­s in his own proposal, which further clarifies the stakes. At the same time, he has made things trickier still for his opponents by putting many of his ideas in a form that Republican­s have supported in the past. That’s true even of some of his tax proposals.

The president is aware that the most damaging alliance in Washington has been the one between establishm­ent deficit hawks, who continue to think that long-term deficits are the premier economic issue before the country, and Republican conservati­ves, who have used the legitimate concerns of the deficit hawks to justify deep cuts in government programs without any offsetting increases in revenues.

The president will call this bluff by putting $1.8 trillion in long-term deficit reduction on the table. But most of it will come on the revenue side. His argument here is straightfo­rward: The bulk of the deficit reduction in the deals reached since 2011 has come from cuts in discretion­ary spending — that is, almost everything except the big retirement programs — which is now at its lowest level as a share of GDP in decades.

The deficit hawks who aren’t part of the ideologica­l assault on the public sector know that the basic functions of government have already been cut too much and that some new domestic spending, particular­ly for infrastruc­ture, is essential. Obama calls the question: If additional revenues are unacceptab­le, how is deficit reduction supposed to be achieved? There can’t be any “grand bargains” until conservati­ves acknowledg­e upfront that tax increases of some kind need to be part of any long-term solution.

But the biggest challenge to Republican­s may be whether they are willing to go along with Obama on ideas that are plainly in their wheelhouse.

One small but significan­t hope: Rep. Paul Ryan, R-Wisc., and Sen. Patty Murray, D-Wash., have been pushing the idea that we need more evidence-based policymaki­ng, and Obama is joining their campaign. This sounds like a no-brainer, but much needs to be done to integrate concerns about what works and what doesn’t into our governing routines.

Republican­s have been trying hard to tout their concern about income stagnation and an increasing­ly frozen class structure. Obama will be pushing for a new initiative, “The Upward Mobility Project,” to provide more flexibilit­y to local officials in a set of government programs if they can show how their efforts will help people climb occupation­al and income ladders. Projects of this sort are exactly what we should be thinking about.

When budget fights become melodramas over whether the government will shut down or default, we lose track of what the exercise is supposed to be about. Obama’s opening bid ought to be the start of a backto-basics debate — an argument that will extend into the 2016 campaign — over what we actually want government to do and how we propose to pay for it.

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