Chattanooga Times Free Press

REPUBLICAN­S BALK AT MCCARTHY’S SPENDING CUTS

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Whether you’re for the demand by House Republican­s for deep spending cuts as a condition for raising the nation’s debt ceiling or you’re against it, there are some things you should know in assessing their gambit.

Perhaps the single most important fact is this: While Speaker Kevin McCarthy likes to claim that his debt limit bill would break Democrats’ “addiction to spending,” the Republican­s — whose own appetite for spending is well establishe­d — would subject just 13% of federal spending to the knife.

They’ve said they’ll exempt national defense, some veterans programs, Social Security and Medicare, which amounts to about half of all spending. As for the portion they’re targeting, socalled domestic discretion­ary spending, that relatively small part of the overall budget covers just about everything else the government does, and that Americans expect it to do.

Just before midnight on Monday — midnight! — the House Appropriat­ions Committee canceled its Tuesday and Wednesday meetings when voting was scheduled on the first of the dozen bills that annually fund the federal government’s operations. Those bills have to fill in the gory details of the spending cuts that Republican­s left unidentifi­ed when they passed McCarthy’s debt limit bill last month.

The stated reason for the postponeme­nt: The committee’s Republican majority wanted to give McCarthy “maximum flexibilit­y” in his talks with Biden.

The real reason: They didn’t have the votes to pass their own bills. Failure, in turn, would have undercut McCarthy’s leverage in the negotiatio­ns.

McCarthy’s debt-limit bill calls for trimming 9% from the $1.6 trillion that currently goes to annual discretion­ary spending. But with Republican­s’ promised exemptions for the Pentagon and some veterans programs, the cuts in what’s left on the table would reach something close to a devastatin­g 30%. Accounting for inflation, the reductions would be even greater.

Even then, the savings generated would be small relative to the nation’s annual budget deficits. And Republican­s, if they have their way, would in effect wipe out those savings by extending all the Trump-era tax cuts for another decade, adding trillions more to the federal debt they purport to fear.

So what’s included in the budget slice that Republican­s want to carve up? The bills stalled in the Appropriat­ions Committee by Republican­s’ infighting would cover spending for agricultur­e, including farm subsidies and nutrition programs; border protection­s and homeland security; a new program to assist veterans exposed to toxins during wartime; and the constructi­on and maintenanc­e of military facilities and housing, to name some.

Also on the Republican­s’ block in future appropriat­ions bills: air traffic control; cancer and Alzheimer’s research; Meals on Wheels; infrastruc­ture in general; opioid treatments; Head Start; rail, food and drug safety; and much, much more. Although Social Security and Medicare wouldn’t face cuts, good luck getting assistance once the programs’ staffing is reduced.

Economists and fiscal experts consider much of the spending that is at issue as “seed corn” investment­s in physical and human capital, with a proven return.

Republican­s say they’ll make no concession­s, that agreeing to raise the debt ceiling is concession enough. Really? Lifting the debt limit is their patriotic duty, especially considerin­g their complicity in driving up the debt — fully a quarter of it during Donald Trump’s presidency.

Consider this: Republican­s want to raise the debt limit only enough to allow the Treasury to borrow through next spring. What then? They’ll hold us up for more spending cuts.

That would be on top of the ones they’re already having trouble producing, while threatenin­g the nation with economic disaster.

 ?? ?? Jackie Calmes
Jackie Calmes

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