The idea for this blog developed out of my belief that while the issues facing Congress and the President are becoming both more complex and more politicized, the general American populous remains consistently underinformed and/or overly influenced by misleading, partisan advertising.

This blog will attempt to inform people by laying out major political issues in concise and informative "handbooks" in order to provide a simple alternative for those who want to be more politically informed but do not have the time to search for the information themselves.

As a news junkie, I will also post relevant news, analysis, and articles. Thank you so much for reading and i hope that you enjoy!

Add this blog on twitter: http://twitter.com/ - !/GovernmentGuide

Showing posts with label Spending Cuts. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Spending Cuts. Show all posts

Thursday, July 28, 2011

Weekday Rant: Handling of Debt Ceiling Has Become Incomprehensible

 
Google Images

Today really got to me. It may have been the lack of sleep, the lack of my morning coffee, or the hour commute that I make to work, but for some reason, I found myself utterly disgusted with the entire political system for the first time in recent memory. I won't bore you with a long drawn-out analysis but I just felt like I needed to rant and let a couple of things out quickly.

The more that this debt ceiling debate continues, the more frustrated that I become. With the markets selling off today (and most likely until we get some type of deal), how can politicians not possibly realize that what they are doing, the brinkmanship that they are directly committing too, is negatively affecting the constituents that they were sent to Washington to represent?

Furthermore, why does America so badly desire for "fresh faces" in Washington? There's a reason why we have career politicians in Congress. Sure, the longer you're in Congress, the more of a chance you have to be exposed to things that may be ethically questionable and the greater sense of entitlement you may feel. But there are so many positives to having experienced politicians in Washington: They get it, period. They understand that compromise is necessary, that both sides will have to suffer some if you're really serious about fixing the deficit. They try to beat back partisanship and don't play politics with issues that could have horrible consequences. 

But freshman in Congress just don't get it. Sure, they're a fresh face. Sure, they were swept into office because they were able to convince the American public that the nation was broke (even though, in the short term it really is not). Can a new voice in Washington help push things in the right direction? Sure it can. But freshman in Congress are not using their voices to start a dialogue, to compromise on the issues that were most important to them when they were campaigning. No, instead, they are using their voices to whine, complain, and spew talking points, doing all that they can to avoid compromise at all costs. This is not the way that Washington works. 
Google Images: Mo Brooks, a freshman congressman from Alabama, said that he did not understand why the United States credit might be downgraded. In fact, Brooks argued that our credit should actually be upgraded since Tea Party Republicans are refusing to raise the debt ceiling (I wish I were kidding).

Experienced congressman understand that there is a time and a place for every issue. If you want to talk about eliminating waste in government, reforming entitlements, or letting the Bush tax cuts expire, great -- I agree, and I think that's a debate that absolutely needs to be had. But why now? Why, when the economy is just starting to recover, when unemployment is still around 9%, when the debt ceiling needs to be raised to avoid a default and a credit downgrade, are members of Congress holding the economy hostage to their demands? Plain and simple, freshman in Congress are putting their own demands before their constituents and before the fate of the nation. 

I follow politics night and day. When I wake up, I immediately read Politico Playbook. When I get to work, I leave Politico and The Hill open so I can constantly check back for updates. I created a twitter for the purpose of getting up-to-the-minute breaking news. In my four years of real understanding and interest for politics, I have never once grown tired of it. I love the analysis, love the discussions, love the horse race. But for the first time, I'm starting to grow tired. I simply do not understand what is happening with our government anymore.

How can such a basic, procedural vote essentially stop the entire United States government from talking about anything else for months? How can one party hold the entire economy hostage, risking the fate of our credit and our nation for years, over one vote? It is simply incomprehensible to me. The partisan bickering, the despicable brinkmanship, has finally gotten out of hand. President Obama said that "America voted for divided government, but they did not vote for dysfunctional government." 

We are a centrist nation. Freshman Republicans say they have a mandate from the American people, that they speak for the American people, when they say that the debt ceiling should not be raised. They're not telling the truth. Every major poll shows that Americans are desperate for compromise. 

Americans are generally a centrist group of people. In most cases, voting Americans look for some form of divided government, and rightfully so. With divided government, both parties are forced to compromise, sacrificing a few points to the other party while gaining a few as well. But this is not what happened. Instead, freshman, tea-party supported members of Congress have put the fate of this country at risk in their attempts to discredit every single thing that President Obama has done in office. They came to Washington saying that they would end the partisan rancor once and for all and what did they end up doing but widening the ideological divide and standing directly in the way of any and all compromise. 

I want to leave you with a quote. Steve Israel, the chairman of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee said something that, to me, has never rang more true: 

"The Republican Party is trying to repeal the 20th century."

Wednesday, July 27, 2011

Weekday Rant: Handling of Debt Ceiling Has Become Incomprehensible

Google Images
Today really got to me. It may have been the lack of sleep, the lack of my morning coffee, or the hour commute that I make to work, but for some reason, I found myself utterly disgusted with the entire political system for the first time in recent memory. I won't bore you with a long drawn-out analysis but I just felt like I needed to rant and let a couple of things out quickly.

The more that this debt ceiling debate continues, the more frustrated that I become. With the markets selling off today (and most likely until we get some type of deal), how can politicians not possibly realize that what they are doing, the brinkmanship that they are directly committing too, is negatively affecting the constituents that they were sent to Washington to represent?

Furthermore, why does America so badly desire for "fresh faces" in Washington? There's a reason why we have career politicians in Congress. Sure, the longer you're in Congress, the more of a chance you have to be exposed to things that may be ethically questionable and the greater sense of entitlement you may feel. But there are so many positives to having experienced politicians in Washington: They get it, period. They understand that compromise is necessary, that both sides will have to suffer some if you're really serious about fixing the deficit. They try to beat back partisanship and don't play politics with issues that could have horrible consequences. 

But freshman in Congress just don't get it. Sure, they're a fresh face. Sure, they were swept into office because they were able to convince the American public that the nation was broke (even though, in the short term it really is not). Can a new voice in Washington help push things in the right direction? Sure it can. But freshman in Congress are not using their voices to start a dialogue, to compromise on the issues that were most important to them when they were campaigning. No, instead, they are using their voices to whine, complain, and spew talking points, doing all that they can to avoid compromise at all costs. This is not the way that Washington works. 

Google Images: Mo Brooks, a freshman congressman from Alabama, said that he did not understand why the United States credit might be downgraded. In fact, Brooks argued that our credit should actually be upgraded since Tea Party Republicans are refusing to raise the debt ceiling (I wish I were kidding).
Experienced congressman understand that there is a time and a place for every issue. If you want to talk about eliminating waste in government, reforming entitlements, or letting the Bush tax cuts expire, great -- I agree, and I think that's a debate that absolutely needs to be had. But why now? Why, when the economy is just starting to recover, when unemployment is still around 9%, when the debt ceiling needs to be raised to avoid a default and a credit downgrade, are members of Congress holding the economy hostage to their demands? Plain and simple, freshman in Congress are putting their own demands before their constituents and before the fate of the nation. 

I follow politics night and day. When I wake up, I immediately read Politico Playbook. When I get to work, I leave Politico and The Hill open so I can constantly check back for updates. I created a twitter for the purpose of getting up-to-the-minute breaking news. In my four years of real understanding and interest for politics, I have never once grown tired of it. I love the analysis, love the discussions, love the horse race. But for the first time, I'm starting to grow tired. I simply do not understand what is happening with our government anymore.

How can such a basic, procedural vote essentially stop the entire United States government from talking about anything else for months? How can one party hold the entire economy hostage, risking the fate of our credit and our nation for years, over one vote? It is simply incomprehensible to me. The partisan bickering, the despicable brinkmanship, has finally gotten out of hand. President Obama said that "America voted for divided government, but they did not vote for dysfunctional government." 

We are a centrist nation. Freshman Republicans say they have a mandate from the American people, that they speak for the American people, when they say that the debt ceiling should not be raised. They're not telling the truth. Every major poll shows that Americans are desperate for compromise. 
Americans are generally a centrist group of people. In most cases, voting Americans look for some form of divided government, and rightfully so. With divided government, both parties are forced to compromise, sacrificing a few points to the other party while gaining a few as well. But this is not what happened. Instead, freshman, tea-party supported members of Congress have put the fate of this country at risk in their attempts to discredit every single thing that President Obama has done in office. They came to Washington saying that they would end the partisan rancor once and for all and what did they end up doing but widening the ideological divide and standing directly in the way of any and all compromise. 

I want to leave you with a quote. Steve Israel, the chairman of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee said something that, to me, has never rang more true: 

"The Republican Party is trying to repeal the 20th century."

Friday, July 22, 2011

Debt Ceiling Drama: Tea Party Republicans vs. Everyone Else

Google Images
Just weeks after the Republican caucus wholly rejected any form of "grand deal" to raise the debt ceiling, rumors are swirling around the Capitol that the possibility for a larger package has been put back on the table, and that progress is being made.

A Quick Update
For those who have not been paying much attention lately, here are the most recent updates:
  • House Republicans debated and passed the "Cut, Cap, and Balance Act," with 9 republicans opposing and 5 Democrats supporting the bill. According to the language of the bill, the legislation would cut discretionary spending by around $380 billion in 2012 (although where the cuts come from has not yet been specified), enforce a cap on spending that would make it impossible to spend any more than 18% of GDP, and put a balanced budget amendment on the table which would force all tax increases to be passed by a 2/3 vote instead of a simple majority. Republicans have said that this bill will help to right America's fiscal house and spur job growth by creating certainty in the marketplace. Critics have pounced on the bill for not specifying what cuts would be made. They have also asserted that if the bill became law, the legislation would severely handicap the President in times of economic downturn (as he would be unable to access any type of money that would be intended for stimulus). Either way, the bill is said to be dead in the water in the Senate, as the Senate Democratic Majority would be wholly unlikely to pass such a bill seeing as a balanced budget amendment has very limited support among progressives.
  • The Senate Minority Leader, Mitch McConnell, has floated a bill that would cut around $1.5 trillion in spending over 10 years while also giving the President the authority to suggest (but not implement) even more future spending cuts as one of the conditions to raising the debt ceiling. But House Republicans have thrown up major roadblocks to this idea, saying that it does not cut enough over the ten year period and that it gives the President too much discretion and too many opportunities to back out of those cuts in the future. Additionally, the President and his administration have been desperately pushing for a bigger deficit-reduction package, which has led many lawmakers to consider the McConnell deal as being too small and possibly unnecessary. Because of this, the bill is looking less and less likely to be the ultimate solution that is agreed upon by the President and Congress. 
Google Images: Mitch McConnell is working frantically to  create a plan that would cut $1.5 trillion dollars from the budget over 10 years and give the President the authorization to raise the debt ceiling. But commentators say it has very little chance of passing the House with enough Tea-Party Republican support. 
Where Does This Leave Us?
With the two most high-profile bills all but ruled out, where does this leave us? Remember a few weeks ago when Boehner drew major flack from House Majority Leader Cantor and the rest of the Republican caucus for offering them a "grand deal" that he had assisted in conceiving with the President? Well, it appears that that plan is back with a vengeance. Commentators and officials close to the White House are saying that a long-term, large-scale deficit plan is now seeming to be more and more likely of an option. 

According to a number of different sources, the President is still looking for a large-scale deficit deal that would likely save more than $4 trillion dollars over ten years, through discretionary cuts, entitlement reforms, tax increases on wealthy Americans, and the elimination of tax subsidies for big oil companies and a number of other corporations. And with Republicans taking major flack for their no-compromise policy, they may at this point be willing to oblige him. 

What would this possible deal look like? According to the Huffington Post,
It would involve steep reductions in health care spending -- both in Medicare and Medicaid. In previous debt ceiling negotiations, the administration has supported further means-testing elements of Medicare as well as raising the eligibility age of the program. Cuts to Medicare suppliers would also be part of a larger package, as would adjusting the payment structure of Social Security so that a lower level of benefits was paid out over time.
Even if these controversial cuts to medicare were approved by both Democrats and Republicans, the problem of tax revenue is still an issue that seems dishearteningly difficult to find common ground on. Said simply, Democrats want the Bush era tax cuts curtailed and rates to go back up to Clinton era levels, which, it should be noted, was a period in which the government was running surpluses (however, whether or not that had to do with tax rates is disputed). Republicans, on the other hand, do not want any form of tax increase involved in a deal.

But the most outspoken congressional Republicans, the freshman, tea-party backed conservatives, may have to swallow the medicine. While Speaker Boehner has publicly stated that Republicans are solely focused on getting cut, cap, and balance signed into law, according to unconfirmed yet widely circulated reports, Speaker Boehner spoke openly to the Republican caucus in a private meeting and said that some form of a grand deal is still on the table. It has also been reported that he has expressed interest in a large-scale deal with the potential for raises in revenue and has been working on some form of a deal directly with President Obama.

Knowing that Republicans will do all they can to avoid tax increases, the President has offered them an alternative path:
The White House has laid out an alternative suggestion during past negotiations: Lawmakers would be required to find $800 billion in additional revenues over the next decade. If they could not find an agreement, then the Bush-era tax cuts for the high-end earners will expire.
What's more, Grover Norquist, the man behind the "no-new-tax-pledge" which all congressman (with a handful of exceptions) have signed, said explicitly that not continuing the Bush tax cuts would not theoretically be considered a tax increase, and therefore would not violate the pledge that Republicans in Congress signed. According to the Washington Post,
According to Mr. Norquist’s interpretation of the Americans for Tax Reform pledge, lawmakers have the technical leeway to bring in as much as $4 trillion in new tax revenue — the cost of extending President George W. Bush’s tax cuts for another decade — without being accused of breaking their promise. “Not continuing a tax cut is not technically a tax increase,” Mr. Norquist told us. So it doesn’t violate the pledge? “We wouldn’t hold it that way,” he said.
Republicans are critical of this alternative path, saying that all Democrats would have to do was simply "run out the clock" -- meaning that they would oppose any and all deals knowing that the Bush tax rates on the rich would go up no matter what. Because of this, Democratic officials say they are floating a new, slightly different idea:
In order to try and find agreement on this front, a slight reversal to the administration's original plan has been floated, according to a Democratic official. Rather than write the decoupling of the Bush tax cuts into the debt ceiling legislation, negotiators will simply leave the rates as is.
Lawmakers would still be tasked with finding $800 billion or so in revenues to supplement a deficit-reduction deal. But if that $800 billion didn't materialize, they would no longer have the fallback option of seeing the high-end rates go back to pre-Bush levels when they are set to expire at the end of 2012. Instead, they would have to relive the dramatic legislative showdown that happened in late 2010, when the president and Democrats tried, unsuccessfully, to decouple the top-rates from the middle and lower income rates.  
Google Images: Grover Norquist, The Head of Americans for Tax Reform
 Analysis: Tea Party vs. All 
As demonstrated above, there are a number of different options floating around. But the worry is that none of them are politically viable, by which I mean none of them would be able to get enough support from House Republicans. Even with President Obama compromising on trillions of cuts, including deeply unpopular cuts to medicare and medicaid, and offering an olive branch to Republicans on taxes, Tea Party backed Republicans still refuse to even entertain the idea of increasing taxes a single penny. Instead, House Republicans have taken to the airwaves and the television screens, arguing with political commentators and hosts that cut, cap, and balance has a great chance of passing the Senate. Case and point, Illinois Rep. Joe Walsh got into a heated (and extremely juvenile) argument with Chris Matthews about the plan that Tea Party Republicans have trumpeted:




Through all the bickering (which I have argued is a huge problem with the mass media), Walsh repeatedly asserts that cut, cap, and balance has a good chance of passing the Senate. This is pure posturing. Cut, cap, and balance has absolutely no chance of passing the Senate. It would need a total of 60 Senators to vote in favor and with the chamber being composed of a Democratic majority vehemently opposed to such ideologically driven legislation, it is dead on arrival. Joe Walsh (and more broadly members of the Tea Party Republican caucus) have said that they are in no way posturing, that they want to see a deal done more than anyone else. In fact, they argue that President Obama is the one lying in an attempt to turn the people against the Republican party.

If Tea Party Republicans are not posturing, if they really believe in compromise, why did they push so hard for cut, cap, and balance, legislation that is purely ideologically driven (with a requirement that all tax increases can only be put into law with a 2/3rds majority) and had absolutely no chance of ever becoming law? If they believe in compromise, with less than two weeks before the government begins the process of defaulting on its debts, shouldn't they be working with the President, working with their leadership to try to hammer out a deal in which no one is happy, but everyone is equally unhappy?

A new CNN poll came out today that showed that 64% of Americans believe that any debt ceiling deal should include a mix of both spending cuts and tax increases:

In those discussions, several budget plans have been proposed that would reduce the amount the government owes by trillions of dollars over the next ten years.  If you had to choose, would you rather see Congress and President Obama agree to a budget plan that only includes cuts in government spending, or a budget plan that includes a combination of spending cuts and tax increases on higher-income Americans and some businesses? 
Only spending cuts 34%  
Spending cuts and tax increases 64%
The Republican Party is in trouble on the debt ceiling, and they are being given a huge chance to potentially avoid political catastrophe. President Obama is giving up at least $2.4 trillion in spending cuts, and what does he want in return? For Bush era tax cuts to expire. Just to hammer the point home (I know I just provided the quote), even Grover Norquist, the biggest anti-tax crusader in Washington, is saying that allowing tax cuts to simply expire is not equal to a tax hike and therefore would not draw the ire of Norquist's powerful group, Americans for Tax Reform. But tea party candidates are still clinging on to the wildly imaginative idea that cut, cap, and balance has a chance to pass the Senate.

This should be most troubling for Republicans like John Boehner and Senate Republicans who believe that compromise is necessary to making a deal. Why? Because when the American voter thinks about who they would blame if the government defaults, their opinions are not nuanced. The vast majority do not say "Republicans in the House" or "Tea Party Republicans." No, they say simply Republicans. This is the same phenomenon that happens almost every midterm election after a new president has been elected. Take, for instance, 2008, when President Obama was swept into office with a huge margin of victory and dozens of congressman rode in on his coattails. Then, in 2010, voters got upset with President Obama because they had voted for change and not a whole lot happened. What did the voters do? They did not get upset at just President Obama, no, they blamed the entire Democratic Party, voting out a huge number of House Democrats and hammering away at the Democratic Senate Majority.

A similar situation appears to be manifesting with the debt ceiling talks. While Senate Republicans have showed openness to compromise, the powerful group of freshman tea-party backed republican congressman have maintained their fierce fight against taxes. In fact, many Senate Republicans have showed interest in the so-called "Gang of Six" proposal that was created by 3 Democrats and 3 Republicans. The plan would essentially raise $1.7 trillion of revenue over the next ten years. But the plan drew near-immediate criticism from House Republicans.

Paul Ryan, the head of the House Budget Committee, expressed his dismay with the plan that would raise revenues:
Unfortunately, it [the plan] increases revenues while failing to seriously address exploding federal spending on health care, which is the primary driver of our debt. There are also serious concerns that the proposal’s substance on spending falls far short of what is needed to achieve the savings it claims.
And Tea-party freshman have also been chiming in against the plan, frustrated with the proposed tax increases. What House Republicans fail to realize is this: The President has expressed a willingness to compromise on trillions of cuts in discretionary and entitlement spending, a willingness that most Democrats are visibly frustrated with. Cuts to Medicare are angering for any Democrat.

But if President Obama's final deal with Speaker Boehner includes cuts to medicare, I would be outright shocked if Democrats did not swallow the bitter pill and vote for the plan anyways, despite their public outcries. This is the main difference between congressional Democrats and Republicans. Putting all the rhetoric aside, Democrats in Congress have shown a willingness to take politics out of the equation and put the country first. Will Democrats take major flack for increasing the debt limit and agreeing to cuts to medicare? Absolutely. They may even lose some wealthy fundraisers. But they understand that if the debt limit is not raised, this country is in grave danger of an even more calamitous economic collapse than 2008.

Tea-party Republicans (this does not include Senate Republicans or Speaker Boehner) say they want to move the nation forward, get our fiscal house in order, and create jobs. But the legislation they're supporting (like cut, cap, and balance) and the roadblocks that they are constantly throwing at the President and at Speaker Boehner suggest the opposite.

Google Images: Tea Party Republicans are sticking to their guns on cut, cap, and balance
And the voters have had enough of it. A recent CNN poll indicated that that 51% of Americans would blame the Republican Congress if the deal is not reached, whereas only 30% would blame Obama. President Obama has positioned himself and the Democratic Party as compromisers, centrists whose main goal is to fix the economy without harming the middle class. Republicans have no response. Worse, Tea Party Republicans have unsuccessfully attempted to paint Obama as a liar and a radical and have worked as hard as possible to derail a possible compromise.

Tea Party House Representatives were elected to Washington in 2010 to cut spending and restore America's fiscal responsibility. But if they don't quickly realize the implications of their actions, and understand that a vast majority of Americans are demanding compromise, come 2012, those "newly elected representatives" will be voted out just as swiftly as they were voted in.

Thursday, July 14, 2011

FiveThirtyEight: G.O.P. No Tax Stance is Oustide Political Mainstream

Nate Silver published an extremely interesting article yesterday about how the G.O.P.’s fervent no-tax policy is outside of the political mainstream.

He cites Gallup most recent poll (posted below), and the results are fairly surprising compared to those of the Tea Party poll that the Washington Post did:
Preferences for Spending Cuts vs. Tax Increases to Reduce the Deficit

As you may know, Congress can reduce the federal budget deficit by cutting spending, raising taxes, or a combination of the two. Ideally, how would you prefer to see Congress attempt to reduce the federal budget deficit?      
Only with spending cuts
20%
Mostly with spending cuts
30%
Equally with spending cuts and tax increases
32%
Mostly with tax increases
7%
Only with tax increases
4%


Total: Only/Mostly with spending cuts
50%
Total: Only/Mostly with tax increases
11%

[Gallup, 7/13/2011]

While Republican in the House are vehemently defending a spending-cuts-only debt ceiling deal, Gallup’s poll shows that this is actually outside the mainstream of the American public. Only 26% of Republican voters surveyed took the position that a deal should be 100% spending cuts, along with 20% of those polled overall. In fact, where the most popular answer (at 32%) was that any deal should utilize spending cuts and tax increases equally.

Additionally, Republican congressmen (largely through their leaders, Eric Cantor and John Boehner), have been vastly overstating the amount of tax increases that President Obama’s debt ceiling idea would include. The Obama plan would include 83% spending cuts to 17% tax increases/the elimination of tax loopholes.

Nate Silver explained it best in his article:
We can also use the Gallup poll to tease out what mix of tax increases and spending cuts the public would like to see in a deal. Assume that the people who told Gallup that they wanted “mostly” cuts would prefer a 3-to-1 ratio of spending reductions to tax increases, and that those who said they wanted mostly tax increases would prefer a 3-to-1 ratio in the opposite direction. (The other choices that Gallup provided in the poll — an equal mix of tax increases and spending cuts or a deal that consisted entirely of one or the other — are straightforward to interpret.)

The average Republican voter, based on this data, wants a mix of 26 percent tax increases to 74 percent spending cuts. The average independent voter prefers a 34-to-66 mix, while the average Democratic voter wants a 46-to-54 mix.
Now consider the positions of the respective parties to the negotiation. One framework that President Obama has offered, which would reduce the debt by a reported $2 trillion, contains a mix of about 17 percent tax increases to 83 percent spending cuts.
Check out the whole article here, or click the link below:
http://fivethirtyeight.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/07/13/house-republicans-no-tax-stance-far-outside-political-mainstream/