Chattanooga Times Free Press

Millennial business leaders rally against federal debt

Weston Wamp leads national effort calling for fiscal restraint in spending

- BY ANDY SHER

As the federal deficit approaches a record $2.2 trillion in the current fiscal year, millennial business leaders are uniting in a new effort to find ways to limit the national debt and its potentiall­y catastroph­ic long-term consequenc­es.

The newly created Millennial Debt Commission is comprised of 16 young business leaders from across the country and is being headed by Weston Wamp, a 33-year-old, twotime Republican congressio­nal candidate in Chattanoog­a and the son of former U.S. Rep. Zach Wamp.

“I believe that the national debt eventually is going to present itself as the greatest challenge that my generation faces and it is unpreceden­ted for our country,” Wamp said Friday. “I don’t think most people understand the gravity of the risk we take every year that we don’t address these longterm fiscal challenges.”

Wamp said he founded the commission based upon his passionate concern over America’s failure to balance its government budget even during robust economic times. He called the growing federal deficit “generation­al theft” that will burden today’s children and young people forced to pay back today’s borrowing, or at least the interest on the growing debt.

The Millennial Debt Commission is a non-profit, non-partisan group that will work to study and advocate for approaches to limit the growth of the U.S. debt. Wamp said such solutions will require both sides of the Congressio­nal aisle to be willing to consider making changes to everything from Social Security and Medicare to military spending and taxes.

“For too long, our country has avoided having the difficult discussion­s needed to address our ever-growing national debt,” said U.S. Representa­tive Mike Gallagher, R-Wisconsin, an honorary congressio­nal advisor to the

commission. “This commission recognizes that the generation­s of tomorrow will pay for the irresponsi­ble spending decisions of today, and I have no doubt this group of millennial leaders will utilize their unique background­s to help address the fiscal challenges our country faces. Problems don’t age well, and I look forward to working with this group on ways we can get our fiscal house in order.”

Gallagher is among seven members of Congress who will address the new commission at their inaugural meeting Tuesday. Former U.S. Sen. Bob Corker of Chattanoog­a and former South Carolina Sen. Jim DeMint will also speak at next week’s event.

The initiative was endorsed by the late former Sen. Tom Coburn, R-Oklahoma, prior to his death is March and is being backed by two prominent millennial business owners in Chattanoog­a — BellHops co-founder Cam Doody and Legacybox co-founder Nick Macco — along with 14 other young business owners across the country as well as several foundation­s.

The debt commission is starting its efforts at a time of record budget deficits this spring caused by the coronaviru­s pandemic, which has both pushed up relief spending by Congress and depressed tax collection­s as the economy was shutdown or at least slowed.

Wamp said deficit spending is appropriat­e during emergency situations like what America now faces. But he said the red ink was flowing earlier this year even when the economy was strong, the stock market was at record highs and coronaviru­s had not yet spread to the United States.

Neither of the presumptiv­e nominees this year for president — Republican Donald Trump or Democrat Joe Biden — are talking much about the deficit in this year’s campaign. But Wamp said the Millennial Debt Commission hopes to work on long-term solutions to the growing deficit far beyond this year’s campaign.

Wamp said millennial­s who will be stuck paying the bills for today’s debts should be more motivated to make the changes needed to bring spending more in line with government revenues.

“Long before a global pandemic caused a $4 trillion federal deficit, borrowing against future generation­s was the norm in Washington,” Wamp said. “For two decades, the federal government has been poorly managed by both political parties — imperiling the long-term economic and national security of America.”

 ??  ?? Weston Wamp is among the business leaders expressing concern about the growing federal debt.
Weston Wamp is among the business leaders expressing concern about the growing federal debt.
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GETTY IMAGES ILLUSTRATI­ON

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