President Obama dismissed the House of Representatives‘ “Cut, Cap and Balance” plan by saying, “We don’t need a constitutional amendment to do our jobs. The Constitution already tells us to do our jobs - and to make sure that the government is living within its means and making responsible choices.”
The problem is that history shows elected officials are not doing their jobs ensuring that government makes responsible choices and lives within its means.Republicans under George W. Bush were not able to do the job. By the end of his first term, Mr. Obama is expected to have added as much debt as all the prior 43 presidents combined. The problem is bipartisan and structural.
As a Maryland legislator for 16 years and then minority leader, I watched the appropriations process and I can understand why politicians will never do the job without structural change. The pressures to spend will always outweigh the pressures not to spend. Legislators are confronted with a daily parade of interest groups begging for this new program or that spending increase, always with lofty motives of improving the well-being of someone or something. If a specific disadvantaged group is not readily identifiable, then programs are often vaguely positioned “for the children.” The bottom line is that legislators will spend every dime they can get their hands on in response to these spending pressures.
The taxpayer who must pay the freight is busy earning a living and does not have time to come to the capitol and plead the case for fiscal restraint. State legislators in 49 of the 50 states are somewhat constrained by constitutional requirements to balance the state budget. I say “somewhat” because state legislators can raise taxes to cover their excesses. When times are good, there is no thought of saving money for bad times and when the bad times come, there is a scramble for new taxes. But those who resort to the tax solution are held accountable at the next election.
Unlike their federal counterparts, state legislators cannot print money.
Members of Congress have no such constraints and have long thought that their job was to “bring home the bacon” to their district. They can hold press conferences back home bragging about the new project, knowing that the price tag is immaterial and that pork equates with votes. Like state legislatures, Congress will spend every dollar that it collects in revenue and bonds. Unlike state legislatures, Congress can depend on phony money to meet its insatiable demands. However, the day is approaching that the national credit card is so overextended that no one will want to loan us money.
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2 comments:
I wish I could just go to my employer and say "Hey, I've got this great vacation planned, but I'm going to need more money, so I am going to raise my salary 10% and there is nothing you can do about it." That's basically what Congress equates to.
Thank you, Ellen for keeping the sanity. As you can see, there are very few of you. But do not let that stop you. The TEA party happened for a reason.
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