Politics in America. "We the People" need to start being heard and stop letting others do our speaking for us! Health Care, Union Busting, Budgets, Elections. Speak up! Your Voice for Political Issues in America: Naught for Aught and No Change at All! GOP’s campaign on “Spending” provides useful arena for Republican Politicians’ agenda.

Tuesday, March 8, 2011

Naught for Aught and No Change at All! GOP’s campaign on “Spending” provides useful arena for Republican Politicians’ agenda.

So it's budget time across the country.  What we hear consistently, and many have bought into, is that our biggest budget issue is one of spending.  Anyone who follows politics and watches TV, regardless network, hears of budget shortfalls and of our nation's grandchildren inheriting the tremendous amount of debt this administration has amassed.

Boy, have we been sold a bill of goods!  If it is said often enough, people start to hear it, say it more and people start to believe it, and if you keep saying it, people own it, even the liberal left wing media!  Shame on you!  But then, they are corporate owned.

First of all, prior to this current budget season, have you really thought much about the budget process, both at state and national levels?  How many of you worried about your grandchildren inheriting the national debt?  Let's get real here.  Most people don't think about the budget at all unless there are programs lost that are near and dear to each individual, but the GOP have finally found a mantra they can make appear real.  After all, with the dollar amounts involved here and how long, if ever, it is going to take to pay back, they can make their case can't they?

Where did all the money go?  "Poof?"

Let's back up a bit.  The cost of the Iraq war was 3 trillion dollars, which was not included in the Bush budget. The war in Afghanistan was initiated, and dramatic tax cuts (TWICE) that mostly benefited the wealthy.  The cost of these tax cuts was $1.8 trillion, and they weren't paid for.  OK, that brings us up to a $4.8 trillion in leftovers just from tax cuts.  I think Clinton's absconding with all the “Ws” on the Whitehouse's typewriters/keyboards left merely a tiny pock in the $127 billion surplus inherited by the G.W. Bush administration.  

In a special series "Economic Recovery Watch” by the CBPP (The Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, one of the nation’s premier policy organizations working at the federal and state levels on fiscal policy) CBPP states, "The events and policies that have pushed deficits to these high levels in the near term, however, were largely outside the new Administration’s control. If not for the tax cuts enacted during the presidency of George W. Bush that Congress did not pay for, the cost of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan that were initiated during that period, and the effects of the worst economic slump since the Great Depression (including the cost of steps necessary to combat it), we would not be facing these huge deficits in the near term."  The following chart illustrates this:




 Add to all that the $700 billion financial bailout money handed to banks with ribbons and bows by Hank Paulson, Treasury Secretary under Bush, with no conditions or oversight as to how the money was to be used.  The banks used it to pad their bottom line, not to help the economy by making new loans or helping the people who were victims of their sleazy lending practices.

Are we starting to see a trend here?  Hmmmm....tax cuts for the wealthy, non-conditional free money for the banks...."Poof."

What about the 2010 elections?

Were the 2010 elections really a referendum on spending?  Really? To listen to the right-wing politicians right after the election, it was a referendum about Obamacare and Obama policies.  However since the economy is improving, unemployment is down, jobs are up, and some of the new health care initiatives are coming to fruition, the GOP had to find something else they could hang their hat on.  The sad fact is that the “spending” rhetoric of Republican Politicians is an old and worn out one.  They drag it out whenever they can’t come up with something better.

Obama is not without blame, though.  The referendum was really about his failure to use the power of his 53 percent mandate for change from voters.  Obama made the mistake of thinking the GOP in Congress would be reasonable, make meaningful contributions, and try to work in a bipartisan manner.  I can’t help but think that he, as a political strategist, wasn’t also using his attempts at offering bipartisanship to be used to help frame the campaign for the next election: He tried but the Republican leadership was the obstructionist party of “NO” (which they were).  

Angry far left progressives didn’t turn out to vote and fickle Independent voters swung the election to the right as a knee-jerk reaction.  Republican voters would have voted the way they did anyhow.  It was not a Republican victory, it was a voter protest.  Now they have to pay the price.

Bottom line, the referendum was on Obama’s and Congress’ inaction on pushing through the policies the voters gave them the power to enact, not spending.  Now they have lost some of that power.  It will be a harder battle.

GOP Budget Cuts

The following is a list of the deepest GOP budget cuts of discretionary spending (those with cuts of over $200 million) included in the Continuing Resolutions bill.  I have divided it into categories for you.  LI means it also includes low-income services.

Environmental

Clean Water State Revolving Fund   -$700M  (Program of Environmental Protection Agency - EPA)
Land and Water Conservation Fund   -$348M  (program of EPA)
Drinking Water State Revolving Fund   -$250M  (program of EPA)
Agriculture Research   -$246M  (division of USDA:  among other research programs to ensure agricultural viability, it also provides information to enhance the natural resource base and the environment)
LI -Farm Service Agency   -$201M  (division of USDA: provides conservation programs, farm loan programs for low-income farmers, programs for production of bio-fuels)
Agriculture Research   -$246M  (division of USDA:  among other research programs to ensure agricultural viability, it also provides information to enhance the natural resource base and the environment)
FAA Next Gen   -$234M (increases air travel safety while reducing aviation’s environmental impact)
Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy   -$899M  (speaks for itself)


Law Enforcement

LI -COPS   -$600M  (Community Oriented Policing Services: largely used for American Indian and Alaska Native Communities and/or small or rural communities law enforcement, judiciary assistance, and violence against women)
State and Local Law Enforcement Assistance   -$256M
Treasury Forfeiture Fund   -$338M  (Fund is used for asset forfeiture to disrupt and dismantle criminal enterprises.  Also enhances enforcement against terrorist funding and illegal immigration)

Low-income Assistance 


LI -HUD Community Development Fund   -$530M (housing and economic opportunities for low to middle income people)
LI -Community Services Block Grant   -$405M  (Department of Health and Human Services:  provides States, and Federal and State-recognized Indian Tribes and tribal organizations, or other organizations funds to alleviate the causes and conditions of poverty in communities.)
LI -LIHEAP Contingency fund   -$400M  (Department of Health and Human Services: Low-Income Home Energy Assistance Program helps low-income households pay their home heating and cooling bills)
LI -WIC   -$758M  (Division of USDA.  Provides funding to states for food, health care referrals, and nutrition education for pregnant women and women with children up to the age of 5 who are at nutritional risk.)  
LI -International Food Aid grants   -$544M  (Donates agricultural commodities to assist people in poor countries)
LI -CDC   -$755M  (Center for Disease Control: essential public health services)

Other Government Cuts

NASA   -$379M
Internal Revenue Service   -$593M

Department of Treasury   -$268M 

FDA   -$220M  (Food and Drug Administration)


In Conclusion:

These spending cuts proposed by the Republican leaders are not about cutting spending, they are about cutting vital programs for the poor, various non-white ethnic groups, women, children, and independent farmers.  

Here is the test of where allegiances lie:  Does the extension of the Bush tax cuts promote the well-being of those who are in need?  Does it support sustainable environmental practices?  Has it created jobs?  Has it helped the economy?  Does it do anything to make our country better at all?

Let’s see, if there are no opportunities for the poor, then the rich can get richer and no one will have the power to compete with them.  Sustainable environmental practices are expensive and will cut into their profits.  The Bush tax cuts enacted in 2003, the same ones we have now, had negligible growth impact.  After the Wall Street debacle, jobs were lost.  What makes anyone think that at the same corporate tax rate now, jobs are all of a sudden going to burst forth from mega corporations?   Corporations use this money to line their stockholder’s pockets and pay outrageous bonuses, while laying off employees in droves.  Further, the tax cuts for the wealthy are no longer tax cuts, they are the status quo.  Nothing is going to change any time soon as a result, however, if Congress repeals the tax cuts for the wealthy, there wouldn’t be such far reaching budget deficit issues.  Problem solved.

So, in a nutshell, if the Bush tax cuts resulted in something to make this a better place for the citizens of this country, to help the helpless, to make our communities safer, to heal the environment, to help resolve racism, to treat the sick, I would be all for it.  But guess what?  “Poof….”


Find your elected officials
http://www.congress.org/congressorg/dbq/officials

15 comments:

  1. this article gets your brain thinking, "where did all that money go?" and makes you question the practices of those in charge. great article and good job submitting the details.

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  2. Excellent article. I really enjoyed reading it. It really does give food for thought. This article did a wonderful job of articulating what I'm sure many are thinking. I could not agree more. Great job.

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  3. It's hard to ignore the fact and this shows that Republican spirit of cutting social programs and boosting the financial status of big business. It's unfortunate but has always been a trend throughout political history.

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  4. I agree with your premise that the budget crisis was marketing tool more than anything for the Republican party. The truth is they aren't really serious about cutting the budget. The cuts they would actually support are just a drop in the bucket.

    The way to cut the deficit is to grow the economy. The surpluses of the 1990s were the result of a stellar economy. If America can regain its footing economically many of the issues will solve themselves. Cutting services like heating assistance during a deep recession is the wrong answer.

    Good blog

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  5. I understand your point of how the the national debt ballooned under George Bush's administration but to say that the GOP is the big spender and the democrat party isn't, is just not totally accurate. The main reason that people get hung up over Republican spending is that the Republicans are are a bit more likely to take the first step forward in defense of our country whereas the Democrats would rather sit by and see how things turn out. Now I'm not saying I totally agree with the wars that our country has been involved in. Not at all. But I do know that for instance, when Clinton was president and was given the perfect opportunity to capture Osama Bin Laden he chose to skip it and the consequence was so many american lives lost. I would rather more money be spent to protect our country than to be debt free and hesitant about keeping our nation safe. Saying that, I understand that the GOP's spending record isn't pretty but the democrats are not the best at reducing this country's debt either.

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  6. Please pardon me for looking at this mathematically, to try to get some perspective...

    Discretionary spending itself has been greatly inflated over the past decade. President Clinton's last budget, for 2000, had total discretionary spending of 787 billion dollars, adjusted for inflation (according to "Federal Spending by the Numbers", put out by the Heritage foundation, take that for what it's worth).

    Discretionary spending in the 2010 budget, by comparison, was 1,375 billion - 588 billion more.

    Since the cuts that you're listing are in millions, maybe this is a better way to put it: adjusted for inflation, annual Federal spending increased by 588,000 million dollars in ten years.

    As I understand it, the total cuts in discretionary spending proposed by the House amount to about 74,000 million dollars, or about 1/8 of the increase since 2000.

    Or, to put it another way, we're talking about spending MORE than in President Obama's first budget in 2009 (1,258 million).

    And there's the bottom line: if the proposed budget cuts are somehow all about hurting the poor, minorities, women, children, and independent farmers, then logically President Obama's first budget must have been equally repressive, because we're talking about the same levels of discretionary spending.

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  7. I agree with what you said about that the budget crisis was marketing tool more than anything for the Republican party. they don't really want to cut the budget or they are not serious about it, The cuts they would actually support are just a drop in the bucket.The economy needs to be grew in order to cut the deficit. If America can regain its footing economically many of the issues will solve themselves. Cutting services like heating assistance during a deep recession is the wrong answer.

    interesting blog

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  8. It is really not that hard to figure out where is all the money go, they gone right into the deep pocket of the stakeholder of big corporates America. It is no wonder we have the highest number of billionaire in the survey poll on this planet, and the greatest wealth transfer system among all nations deployed by both major political parties to suck majority of us dry and high.

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  9. Obama really frustrates me. Here he says he's going to combat the budget deficit by cutting back spending, but entitlement programs and defense spending are not up for debate. Excuse me!? Defense spending and entitlement programs (social security, medicare, medicaid) are the problem! They're the majority of our spending! Why do we still have troops stationed in Germany, Japan, Europe? Bring them home! We can't afford it!

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  10. Precisely! The corporatist culture in Washington, D.C. is not out to benefit the people; they're in it for their CEO's and major shareholders only.

    At a time of intense competition and loads of pressure to lower wages from overseas, having another wholesale giveaway to the already wealthy can only make matters worse instead of improving them.

    Well done analysis. I'm looking forward to reading more.

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  11. It was great! I totally agree with your opinion, the money go? This question is for leaders.Good analysis. Hope to see more of your posts!

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  12. Unfortunately our country's puritan roots dictate that we force the poor to "prove" that the "deserve" assistance. I'm not saying a government handout is always the answer (in most cases it isn't), but why do politicans consistently cut programs that help the poor get back on their feet.

    If America's poor were given a decent shot to pull themselves out of poverty, I think we'd be amazed at what they could do. But without adequate food, housing and education, how can we expect them to succeed? If our government continues to keep cutting social welfare programs the disparity between rich and poor with continue to divide us as a country. Come on Obama, help us out!

    Good article to get us thinking about what comes next.

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  13. You have a very valid point regarding people being not truly concerned about their grandchildren inheriting the debt. I believe many people are, currently, worried about their own financial survivial!

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  14. I totally agree with what you have to say, Where did all the money go? We all know that the economy is set up for the people to be on the bottom end of the stick. I personally think it doesn't matter who the President is, the government has already been set a certain way and We are the People don't run the government, but we are paying for the lost money.

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  15. This is why we need to take action now. I've already started saving up for my kids future because of the downfall of the economy. Instead of helping other countries America needs to stick with this one for now.

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