Begala writes: 'The conventional wisdom is that Republicans won't support any more tax increases and Democrats won't support any more spending cuts. That's half right.' (photo: TPM Muckraker)
25 February 13
n a column on the budget, to maintain credibility with Beltway elites, I am supposed to claim the impasse is both parties' fault. It isn't. The conventional wisdom is that Republicans won't support any more tax increases and Democrats won't support any more spending cuts. That's half right.
House Democrats have proposed some sensible spending
cuts: like doing away with the billions we spend subsidizing oil
companies. With gas nearing $4 a gallon, does anyone really want to send
taxpayers' money to the welfare queens of ExxonMobil? House Dems would
also enact the Buffett rule (I prefer "Romney rule"), ending the
obscenity in the tax code that lets hedge-fund managers pay a lower tax
rate than their secretaries.
Not to be outdone, Senate Democrats have proposed $110
billion in spending cuts and tax increases: again, reducing oil
subsidies (though not as much as the House Dems), ending the deduction
businesses take for moving jobs overseas and trimming the defense budget
and farm subsidies.
Finally, the White House boasts of having eliminated
77 government programs, including 16 at the Department of Education, 10
at Health and Human Services, and 4 at Labor. The president's budget
calls for $30 billion in cuts to farm programs and $25 billion in
savings from the post office.
The Republicans, for their part, did allow the Bush
tax cuts to expire on income over $450,000, but they seem to have dug in
their heels on the Romney rule and oil subsidies. They are blaming
President Obama's "failed leadership" for the sequester and arguing that
it was the White House that first proposed the gun-to-the-head
approach. As the kids say, whatevs. The Democrats have come to the table
with spending cuts. Will the Republicans join them and support some tax
increases? Um, no. "Just last month," House Speaker John Boehner said,
"The president got his higher taxes on the wealthy, and he's already
back for more." True. But there is still some very low-hanging fruit on
the revenue side. Republicans ought to at least embrace the Romney
rule-if for no other reason than to punish Mitt for running such a lame
campaign.
Meanwhile, some congressional Republicans are taking a
break from complaining about government spending to complain about the
lack of government spending. As Politico has reported, Mississippi
Republican Sen. Roger Wicker is worried about cuts to the Army Corps of
Engineers, Maine Republican Sen. Susan Collins is fretting over
potential job losses at the Portsmouth Naval Shipyard, and John McCain
has continued his longstanding opposition to a sequester, bringing it
home by telling his fellow Arizonans, "They make the Apache helicopter
in Mesa, Arizona. If they cut back, it would have to be affected there."
I would take it further. The new Tea Party senator
from Texas, Ted Cruz, says, "I think we have to be prepared to go so far
as to shut the government down if we don't get some serious policies to
stop the out-of-control spending to tackle the debt." OK, let's start
by shutting down federal spending in Texas. Federal funds account for 32
percent of the Lone Star State's budget. Oh, and how about Fort Hood?
At 340 square miles, it is the biggest Army base in the free world and
the largest single employer in Texas. All that federal spending must be
sapping the souls of my fellow Texans. So let's move Fort Hood to, oh,
say, Nevada. Sen. Harry Reid actually believes in federal investments,
and the Nevada desert might provide good terrain for Fort Hood's tanks.
This could be fun. Oklahoma so hates Obama's big
spending that every single county in the state voted for Mitt Romney.
Oklahoma has twice the percentage of federal employees than the U.S.
average, and Okies get $1.35 back from Washington for each dollar they
pay in taxes. So close the massive FAA center in Oklahoma City. Move it
to Nancy Pelosi's San Francisco district, where they love big
government.
Two years ago I made a similar argument about
Kentucky, calling on Republican Sens. Mitch McConnell and Rand Paul to
put the Bluegrass State in detox for its addiction to local pork. No
such luck. But perhaps the principle can apply to the sequester: enforce
it only in states whose elected representatives won't support the taxes
needed to fund the spending they want.
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