At the end of the year, the members of Congress will face a situation whose resolution — it can be said with only slight exaggeration — is a matter of life and death for the U.S. economy.
At midnight Dec. 31, the Bush-era tax cuts are scheduled to expire, which the Obama White House says will mean an average tax increase next year of $1,600 for 114 million families, a body blow to the economic recovery.
Simultaneously, a 10-year, $1.2 trillion, across-the-board cut is to be imposed on federal spending, also likely to be very damaging to the economy.
Combined, the two would total $600 billion in tax hikes and spending cuts — and, in the opinion of the Congressional Budget Office, would push the country back into recession.
The automatic spending cuts are part of the Budget Control Act passed last August to defuse a crisis largely manufactured by tea party-led House GOP conservatives. In return for raising the debt limit, the Republicans agreed to leave the spending cuts they were demanding in the hands of a “supercommittee.”
To the surprise of few, the supercommittee failed in its mission. It became clear the lawmakers had voted for it, confident that the unthinkable fallback position — the automatic cuts — would never happen.
As the consequences of those cuts became clear — particularly for the military, which would be gutted, to the delight of some on the political left — members who voted for it are fleeing from the Budget Control Act. Defense Secretary Leon Panetta, to his credit, called the cuts “a disaster” for our national defense. Gen. Martin Dempsey, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, called it “an unacceptable risk” that increased the likelihood of a conflict.
The House Republicans are now arguing to scrap the automatic cuts in defense and to make up for them by slashing the budget elsewhere. The Democrats would raise the needed funding by letting the tax cuts expire for families earning more than $250,000 a year. In other words, they are willing to risk the nation’s safety in their quest to punish certain Americans with higher taxes.
Neither solution is acceptable to the other side.
Faced with this difficult and perhaps intractable problem, what is Congress planning to do? Take off for a five-week vacation starting Aug. 3. The Congress-watching newspaper The Hill scolded members: “Do your job — you’re lucky to have one.”
Indeed.











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Au contraire, friends. There is 1) BCA (see above), and 2) the Budget Act of 1974 that requires budget RESOLUTIONS - two different animals. Read on.
BCA is law and addresses debt ceiling limits and spending cuts - mostly discretionary spending, but some minor entitlement spending. It is a framework of sorts that does not address the whole ball of wax.
BCA also allows the Senate to punt for FY2012 and FY2013 in that they will be DEEMED to have passed a resolution, and that's the rub. A budget RESOLUTION, in contrast to BCA, forces the hard, and possibly unpopular, political decisions in that a resolution addresses the ENTIRE ball of wax - discretionary spending, entitlements, and taxes.
Note however, BCA does not PROHIBIT the Senate from taking up a budget resolution. They could if they wanted to, but they just don't. Again, the Senate does not want their plans on paper.
We've been down this road before :)
What about the fact that the Senate, controlled by Harry Reid and the Democrats, in violation of the 1974 Budget Act, has not passed a budget in over 3 years.
What about Obama's FY2012 budget that was voted down in the Senate 97-0. Ninety seven to...ZERO! Not even 1 Democrat voted for it.
What about Obama's FY2013 budget that was voted down in the House 414-0. Four hundred fourteen to...ZERO! Not even 1 Democrat voted for it.
The obvious answer is that Senate Democrats don't dare put down on paper what they plan to do.
The do-nothing Democratic Senate and do-nothing President have abandoned a fundamental duty - production of a budget - which clearly demonstrates that they don't deserve to govern.
One-way legislation was just fine with Kevin then. They got lots of irresponsible things done that pleased him.