Posted on 01/28/2004 8:29:35 PM PST by yonif
WASHINGTON, Jan. 28 President Bush will seek a big increase in the budget of the National Endowment for the Arts, the largest single source of support for the arts in the United States, administration officials said on Wednesday.
The proposal is part of a turnaround for the agency, which was once fighting for its life, attacked by some Republicans as a threat to the nation's moral standards.
Laura Bush plans to announce the request on Thursday, in remarks intended to show the administration's commitment to the arts, aides said.
Administration officials, including White House budget experts, said that Mr. Bush would propose an increase of $15 million to $20 million for the coming fiscal year, which begins Oct. 1. That would be the largest rise in two decades and far more than the most recent increases, about $500,000 for 2003 and $5 million for this year.
The agency has a budget of $121 million this year, 31 percent lower than its peak of $176 million in 1992. After Republicans gained control of Congress in 1995, they cut the agency's budget to slightly less than $100 million, and the budget was essentially flat for five years.
In an e-mail message inviting arts advocates to a news briefing with Mrs. Bush, Dana Gioia, the poet who is chairman of the endowment, says, "You will be present for an important day in N.E.A. history."
Mr. Gioia (pronounced JOY-uh) has tried to move beyond the culture wars that swirled around the agency for years. He has nurtured support among influential members of Congress, including conservative Republicans like Representatives Charles H. Taylor and Sue Myrick of North Carolina. He has held workshops around the country to explain how local arts organizations can apply for assistance.
Public support for the arts was hotly debated in the 1990's. Conservatives complained that the agency was financing obscene or sacrilegious works by artists like Robert Mapplethorpe and Andres Serrano. Former Senator Jesse Helms, Republican of North Carolina, repeatedly tried to eliminate the agency.
Some new money sought by Mr. Bush would expand initiatives with broad bipartisan support, like performances of Shakespeare's plays and "Jazz Masters" concert tours.
Mrs. Bush also plans to introduce a new initiative, "American Masterpieces: Three Centuries of Artistic Genius." This would combine art presentations from painting and literature to music and dance with education programs. The program would give large numbers of students around the country a chance to see exhibitions and performances.
New York receives a large share of the endowment's grants. But under federal law, the agency also gives priority to projects that cater to "underserved populations," including members of minority groups in urban neighborhoods with high poverty rates.
The president's proposal faces an uncertain future at a time of large budget deficits.
Melissa Schwartz, a spokeswoman for the Association of Performing Arts Presenters, an advocacy group, said, "We'll be fighting tooth and nail for the increase."
Some conservatives, like Representative Tom Tancredo, Republican of Colorado, vowed to oppose the increase. Even without support from the government, he said, "art would thrive in America."
Representative Louise M. Slaughter, a New York Democrat who is co-chairwoman of the Congressional Arts Caucus, said she was delighted to learn of Mr. Bush's proposal.
"There's nothing in the world that helps economic development more than arts programs," Ms. Slaughter said. "It was foolish for Congress to choke them and starve them. We should cherish the people who can tell us who we are, where we came from and where we hope to go."
Mr. Tancredo expressed dismay. "We are looking at record deficit and potential cuts in all kinds of programs," he said. "How can I tell constituents that I'll take money away from them to pay for somebody else's idea of good art? I have no more right to do that than to finance somebody else's ideas about religion."
The agency has long had support from some Republicans, like Representatives Christopher Shays of Connecticut and Jim Leach of Iowa.
"Government involvement is designed to take the arts from the grand citadel of the privileged and bring them to the public at large," Mr. Leach said. "This democratization of the arts ennobles the American experience."
BUMP
If anyone else asks, I'll go into it.
You are just not my cup of tea when it comes to 'reasoned debate'.
Your idea of 'reasoned debate' is calling people names.
Please don't think for me... you aren't very good at it.
And you know this how? BTW Reagan had a bigger majority for 6 years in the Senate than Bush has now.
I'm steamed for what are becoming the "usual" reasons...record expansion of government spending, proposed amnesty for illegal aliens, CFR...the list gets longer each day.
Feel free to cite an example.
Ah, logic. REAson. Exceptional analysis, premises building to conclusions. That's what we were missing on this thread.
You are just not my cup of tea when it comes to 'reasoned debate'.
Your idea of 'reasoned debate' is calling people names.
I didn't call you any names. I just gave my opinion of your attitude.
Well go ahead and play your "woe is me" schtick as an excuse for your lack of an answer.
At least with terror attacks people wake up and pay attention to what is going on around them. With this creeping socialist nightmare, our nation is slowly having the soul zapped out of it.
And I don't believe I have remotely suggested that you shouldn't be steamed or concerned about these things...
Me, too...it helps to ask often:
WWHH?
(what would Hillary hate?)
Let's ask some New Yorkers what they would think of your choice.
Socialist: any state action which is promulgated on the principle that it is moral for the state to bestow objects of benevolence on their constituents from the public treasury. (thereby robbing one man, for the direct benefit of another).
It used to be that people calling themselves "conservative" recognized that this was inherently wrong.
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