President Barack Obama will ask
Congress to boost government spending by roughly 7 percent above current
limits, the White House said Thursday, setting up a certain clash with repugicans who insist that federal spending must be held in check.
Obama’s budget, to be formally released Monday, will
call for $74 billion more than the levels frozen in place by
across-the-board cuts agreed to by both Democrats and repugicans and
signed by Obama into law. The White House said his new budget proposals
will “fully reverse” the so-called sequestration on the domestic side,
while raising military spending.
Under Obama’s proposal, national security programs
would see an increase of $38 billion over current spending limits,
raising the defense budget to $561 billion. On the domestic side, Obama
is calling for $530 billion in spending — an increase of $37 billion.
“If Congress rejects my plan and refuses to undo
these arbitrary cuts, it will threaten our economy and our military,”
Obama warned in an op-ed article Thursday in The Huffington Post.
The proposal from the president, two months after
voters booted his party from control of the Senate, reflects the White
House’s newfound confidence in the economy. Obama’s aides believe that
improving conditions give Obama credibility to push his spending
priorities unabashedly — despite the fact that Republicans still believe
government spends far too much.
Federal deficits, gas prices and unemployment are
all falling, while Obama’s poll numbers have crept upward. The president
has been newly combative as he argues it’s time to ease the harsh
measures that were taken to help pull the economy out of recession.
Obama was to promote his proposed spending levels to
House Democrats at their annual retreat in Philadelphia on Thursday
evening. The White House said his budget will be “fully paid for with
cuts to inefficient spending programs and closing tax loopholes,” but
taxpayers will have to wait until the budget is made public to find out
exactly how.
While the proposal to spend more on things like
education, sick leave and health care was sure to delight many members
of Obama’s own party, the repugicans now fully control Congress.
“This is not a surprise,” said Don Stewart, Mitch McConnell’s deputy chief of staff. “Previous
budgets submitted by the president have purported to reverse the
bipartisan spending limits through tax increases that the Congress —
even under Democrats — could never accept.”
Yet Obama’s move also puts repugicans in a precarious position.
Many in the repugican cabal want to spend more on defense,
especially in light of threats from terrorism and extremist groups. But repugicans are divided about how to pay. While some have argued for
ignoring the spending limits, others want to offset the hikes with cuts
to either domestic programs or so-called mandatory programs like Social
Security and Medicare.
By proposing to raise defense spending by about the
same amount as domestic programs, Obama is putting the repugican cabal on notice
that he won’t accept cuts to his own priorities just to make way for
more spending on national security programs that both parties are in the
mood to support.
The Pentagon’s base budget is currently $496
billion, plus another $64 billion for overseas missions. Obama’s
increases would allow for next-generation F-35 fighter jets, for ships
and submarines and for long-range Air Force tankers. Military leaders
have also said the earlier cuts forced reductions in pilots’ flying
hours, training and equipment maintenance.
On the domestic side, Obama has proposed two free
years of community college and creating new or expanded tax credits for
child care and spouses who both work. He’s called for raising the top
capital gains rate on some wealthy couples and consolidating education
tax breaks, although some of those ideas have already faced intense
opposition.
“Until he gets serious about solving our long-term
spending problem, it’s hard to take him seriously,” said Cory Fritz, a
spokesman for John Boehner.
The president’s budget proposal is just that — a proposal— and will not become law.
The budget frames Obama’s opening offer as Democrats
and repugicans head toward an inevitable clash. It’s an agenda that
Obama started selling in the run-up to his State of the Union address
this month, and that House Democrats have sought to echo as they regroup
after losing more members in the midterms.
In his meeting Thursday with House Democrats, Obama
was also to insist that House repugicans not use a funding bill for the
Homeland Security Department to try to quash the executive actions he
took late last year on immigration and deportations. The White House
called that a “dangerous view” by the repugican cabal that would risk the country’s
national security.
No comments:
Post a Comment