Las Vegas Review-Journal

Biden proposal for $6T budget ripped by GOP

- By Gary Martin

WASHINGTON — President Joe Biden proposed a $6 trillion budget that immediatel­y drew fire from Republican­s over increasing government debt and for requesting tax hikes on corporatio­ns and the wealthiest Americans to pay for increased outlays.

Most of the top-line spending had been previously laid out in Biden pro

posals contained in the

$2.3 trillion jobs and infrastruc­ture bill, and the

$1.7 trillion American families plan. Congress already passed, along party lines, a $1.9 trillion COVID-19 rescue package.

Nevada Democrats in the Senate and House have praised the Biden proposals to increase spending for social programs.

Overall, the $1.9 trillion rescue bill would bring in more than $4 billion to Nevada for schools, health care and small- business loans. Of the funds for Nevada, the rescue package will deliver $2.7 billion to the state government, counties and cities.

Republican Rep. Mark Amodei of Nevada supported bipartisan COVID-19 bills last year, but he has joined other GOP lawmakers who questioned appropriat­ions in the $1.9 trillion rescue plan that are unlikely to be spent during the upcoming fiscal year.

Republican leaders also have called some spending proposals giveaways to liberal causes. They also oppose the increased deficit spending and a rollback of Trump-era tax cuts approved by GOP lawmakers in the House and Senate.

Big deficit

The administra­tion’s own estimates project a $1.8 trillion deficit next year. Republican­s say the deficit would add trillions to the overall debt that has already topped $28 trillion because of past spending that includes the COVID-19 relief packages and the GOP tax cut.

But Biden said the budget proposal is geared toward middle-class and working-class Americans hardest hit by the pandemic. In his budget message, he advocated growing the economy from the bottom up and middle out, with corporatio­ns paying their fair share.

“Our prosperity comes from the people who get up every day, work hard, raise their family, pay their taxes, serve their nation, and volunteer in their communitie­s,” Biden said in his message to Congress in the budget document.

Nevada Democrats in Congress have backed Biden proposals to make the child tax cuts permanent, provide incentives to expand child care, provide education benefits from universal prekinderg­arten to two free years of community college.

In addition, he has proposed a jobs plan that would repair and update crumbling infrastruc­ture, expand broadband access and provide updates for schools and wage incentives for elder care workers and teachers.

Starting point

Biden’s budget is merely a proposal and faces the scrutiny of Congress, which controls federal spending through legislatio­n.

While some measures, such as traditiona­l infrastruc­ture projects on roads, bridges and rail, are favored by Democrats and Republican­s alike, the GOP is negotiatin­g to bring the cost of the jobs plan down.

But Biden’s budget blueprint focuses on issues that he campaigned on, such as addressing climate change and clean energy. As expected, no money for Yucca Mountain licensing is included.

Instead, the budget provides funds to support consent-based siting and interim storage for the nation’s used nuclear fuel and high-level radioactiv­e waste.

Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm said the budget still includes $1 billion for nuclear energy research and technologi­es to advance climate goals.

The blueprint also includes $19.7 billion for ongoing projects under the National Nuclear Security Administra­tion, including funds to maintain activities like sustaining the nation’s nuclear weapons stockpile at sites including the Nevada National Security Site north of Las Vegas.

Preparing for adversarie­s

Biden’s $715 billion request for the Pentagon would shift money from traditiona­l weapons systems and focus on preparatio­ns to deter hostile moves from China and other countries with nuclear capabiliti­es.

House Armed Services Chairman Adam Smith, D-wash., said that the president’s budget “reflects the administra­tion’s clear emphasis on China and Russia as key national security challenges.

The defense budget also includes a 2.7 percent pay hike for service members.

Nevada is home to four military installati­ons: Creech and Nellis Air Force bases, Naval Air Station Fallon and the Hawthorne Army Depot. There are roughly 10,000 active-duty personnel stationed in Nevada, including more than 9,000 Air Force members.

Gun violence funding

The budget also includes $2.1 billion — an increase of $232 million over last year — for the Justice Department to address gun violence that has plagued the nation with mass shootings that include the Oct. 1, 2017, tragedy in Las Vegas.

Current and former Nevada lawmakers, both Democrats and Republican­s, have urged federal help, although there is a sharp partisan divide on what should be done.

The budget also proposes $2.2 billion for Indian Health Services to help address past inequities. There is also money to improve and provide low-income housing and social programs.

Biden’s blueprint increases domestic spending by roughly 16 percent, with only a small increase for the Pentagon, which is sure to spark GOP political opposition in the House and the Senate.

In addition, an increase in $3 trillion in taxes by raising the corporate tax and those on people making more than $400,000 per year has already drawn an outcry from Republican­s.

In negotiatio­ns with Republican­s on the infrastruc­ture and jobs bill, Biden has remained adamant that he opposes user fees, tolls and other revenue raising measures.

 ?? Patrick Semansky The Associated Press ?? President Joe Biden and first lady Jill Biden speak to service members at Joint Base Langley-eustis in Hampton, Va. The president on Friday proposed a $6 trillion budget to Congress.
Patrick Semansky The Associated Press President Joe Biden and first lady Jill Biden speak to service members at Joint Base Langley-eustis in Hampton, Va. The president on Friday proposed a $6 trillion budget to Congress.

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