Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Federal budget: No place for freelancer­s

- DEBRA J. SAUNDERS COMMENTARY Debra J. Saunders is the Reviewjour­nal’s former White House correspond­ent and a fellow at the Discovery Institute’s Chapman Center for Citizen Leadership. Contact her at dsaunders@discovery.org.

CAN newly installed House Speaker Kevin Mccarthy deliver on the promises and deals that he floated on his tortured journey to claiming the gavel?

Team GOP’S handshake spending plan includes two goals — to cap discretion­ary spending in fiscal 2024 at 2022 levels as well as a budget blueprint that balances within 10 years.

But what works in the GOP House has to survive the Democrat-controlled Senate and President Joe Biden’s White House. And Democrats don’t believe Republican­s have the resolve to cut spending.

“Do you really believe that Republican­s are going to embrace a government shutdown?” House Ways and Means Chairman Richard Neal asked rhetorical­ly. He teased a future in which budget battles lead to a government shutdown and the GOP folds like a cheap lawn chair.

For her part, Maya Macguineas, president of the bipartisan Committee for a Responsibl­e Federal Budget, sees a path forward. “I’m really pleased they’re raising the issue,” she said.

Macguineas sees the goal of 2022 spending levels for the 2024 budget as eminently doable. “We have run up spending massively in the past few years with increases well over inflation,” she explained.

The fiscal 2023 budget increased discretion­ary spending by $200 billion — which means Washington can make cuts without the pain entailed in slashing austerity spending.

The idea, however, that Washington can balance the budget in 10 years through spending cuts alone — and no tax increases — concerns Macguineas. Cutting spending to 2022 levels, she noted, won’t get Washington on track to balance the budget in a decade. Her organizati­on is focused, not on eliminatin­g annual debt spending so much as “putting the debt on a more sustainabl­e path.”

It’s not even clear that Republican­s would support the cuts needed to balance the budget on their timetable. Asked recently if he would support cuts in defense spending,

House Majority Leader Steve Scalise answered, “No.”

Former President Donald Trump called the “four days of trauma” that led to Mccarthy’s installati­on as speaker as a plus that “made the Republican Party a much stronger party.” This is the fairy tale Republican­s like to tell themselves.

Once again, alas, Trump can’t count. It’s not a huge victory that five or 20 Republican­s pushed a conference of 222 Republican­s to go for measures that can’t survive the Senate. It’s an invitation to future failure.

During a recent news conference, Rep. Rosa Delauro, D-conn., spoke of the collaborat­ion necessary to pass spending measures. “Appropriat­ions bills are must-pass bills,” she noted, that require “bipartisan bicameral agreement.”

The GOP isn’t stronger; the base just thinks it’s stronger. And the base is about to learn otherwise.

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States