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The first sign of an internecine war on the budget emerged at a recent gathering of the House Republican Conference. Rep. Mike Pence, the House's leading deficit hawk, challenged Joshua Bolten, a former Goldman Sachs banker who runs the Office of Management and Budget. There to seek a tranche of $50 billion in relief money, Bolten brushed aside the congressman's insistent fiscal questions. Pence suggested a yearlong delay in launching the Medicare drug benefit; several allies floated the idea of a 10 percent, across-the- board cut in every category of spending. No dice. Bolten agreed that spending "offsets" were a "worthy topic," but stayed mum. It was "not the time to have this debate," he told the assembled Republicans, saying the cash was needed immediately to save lives in the region.
1 posted on 09/20/2005 2:53:17 PM PDT by Gipper08
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To: All

My eyes! may eyes!


2 posted on 09/20/2005 2:58:44 PM PDT by PetroniusMaximus
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To: Gipper08
If New Orleans is meant to be rebuilt, the free market will rebuild it.
3 posted on 09/20/2005 2:59:28 PM PDT by bikepacker67
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To: Gipper08
Paragraphs are your friends. Newsweek's political analysis is like a prefab birdcage liner. You don't have to own a bird. The cr*p is already on the paper.

Did I miss anything?

Congressman Billybob

Latest column: "Kathleen Blanco: Beyond Gross Public Dumb"

5 posted on 09/20/2005 3:00:55 PM PDT by Congressman Billybob (This Freeper was linked for the 2nd time by Rush Limbaugh today (9/13/05). Hoohah!)
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To: Gipper08
No money? No problem!
How will we pay for Katrina (and the war in Iraq)? Easy. We'll borrow it.
By Allan Sloan
Newsweek

Sept. 26, 2005 issue - Can the federal government afford to pay $200 billion or so to repair the damage from Katrina? Of course not—but we're going to spend it anyway. So how are we going to get the money? We're going to borrow it, primarily from foreign lenders, such as the central banks of China and Japan. Borrowing is how we've been able to pay for the war in Iraq and cut taxes at the same time.

And borrowing is how we'll pay for the additional tax cuts that Congress is likely to consider next month.

Washington math, you see, isn't the same as household math. With household budgets, there are caps on how much you can borrow—banks will extend you only so much credit-card and mortgage debt with which to hang yourself. That provides some discipline. Not so in Washington, where Republicans' borrow and spend has replaced Democrats' tax and spend.

The fact that Congress is preparing to cut a variety of taxes by up to $90 billion over five years at the same time Katrina is going to send spending to the moon is living proof of that. What are the government's priorities? Who can say, given that Congress is planning to help pay for those cuts by trimming social programs like Medicaid and food stamps by $35 billion over five years, even as President Bush is pledging to spend what it takes to help poor people affected by Katrina.

No, I'm not making this up. These tax and spending cuts, called for in the congressional budget adopted this spring, were supposed to be considered by Congress last week under the budget reconciliation process. Even though that's now been deferred to next month, Senate budget committee chairman Judd Gregg, a Republican from New Hampshire, told me in an interview that the tax cuts and social spending reductions are still on track. Raising taxes—or letting tax cuts expire on schedule in future years—isn't on the table, he said. On Friday, President Bush ruled out tax cuts to pay for Katrina and talked about spending cuts—none specified—to help cover the tab.

Borrowing endlessly for Katrina and Iraq and tax cuts and Homeland Security is possible only because foreigners are willing to keep buying U.S. Treasury securities despite the relatively low interest rates they pay. At least for now. The cost of hocking ourselves to the eyeballs shows up in the line of the federal budget that says how much interest we're paying. Interest will run about $350 billion in the current fiscal year, according to projections by the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office. It rises to $385 billion next year, $426 billion the year after and so on. This is without Katrina. Just the interest on Katrina—call it 4 percent on $200 billion—is $8 billion a year. While $8 billion is trivial in a world of $2 trillion federal budgets, it's still $40 billion over five years. That's more than the aforementioned $35 billion of social-spending cuts would save.

Households—and even states and cities—have to prove to lenders that they can afford to borrow. But for Uncle Sam, who borrows in dollars and can print as many dollars of Treasury securities as he wants, it's always let the good times roll. Or the bad times. Just keep on spending and borrowing, because at least for now, there's no limit to the debt that Uncle Sam can rack up with foreign and U.S. lenders. (Forget the federal debt ceiling, which has political impact but no financial impact.)

Katrina, like 9/11, really is a one-time emergency that no one can reasonably budget for. It's a short-term problem, albeit a horrendously expensive one. Congress has already authorized $62 billion in Katrina spending and about $8 billion in Katrina-oriented tax cuts for the Gulf Coast. However, almost none of this will show up in the federal budget until 2006—in Washington, the year 2006 starts this Oct. 1. What will the new math look like? Before Katrina, the Congressional Budget Office projected a $503 billion deficit for 2006. That becomes about $540 billion when you make some realistic spending and tax adjustments. Toss in $160 billion for Katrina, and you're looking at a $700 billion deficit.

About a quarter of it is interest the government pays to federal trust funds by giving them Treasury IOUs rather than cash. These include the Social Security trust fund ($97 billion) and federal-employee pension funds and such ($70 billion). Uncle Sam will need to borrow cash—call it $500 billion—to cover the rest of the shortfall. Most of it will come from foreigners.

We'll muddle through and borrow for Katrina. But one day, we'll have one Katrina—or one other unexpected problem—too many. We'll finally spook the financial markets on which we're now so dependent. Federal borrowing costs will rise, the economy will tank, we'll all be hurt. Instead of a "perfect storm" of the physical variety, we'll have one of the financial variety. And like Katrina, it's going to be devastating.

© 2005 Newsweek, Inc.

6 posted on 09/20/2005 3:01:15 PM PDT by RobFromGa (Afghanistan, Iraq, Iran-- what are we waiting for?)
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To: Gipper08
...reports Newsweek Chief Political Correspondent Howard Fineman...

Then it's gotta be true.

7 posted on 09/20/2005 3:04:53 PM PDT by Slump Tester ( What if I'm pregnant Teddy? Errr-ahh Calm down Mary Jo, we'll cross that bridge when we come to it)
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To: Gipper08



No Paragraphs, no make easy reading.


9 posted on 09/20/2005 3:14:39 PM PDT by msnimje (Cogito Ergo Sum Republican)
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To: Gipper08

Let the rats run the project like they are the remains of the WTC.

In a decade if we are lucky we will have a multicultural homosexual museum/canoe ride through the french quarter.


10 posted on 09/20/2005 3:17:03 PM PDT by mmercier (now I have this beer Jones going on...)
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To: Gipper08
Anything from Newsweek doesn't pass the smell test.


If you want a Google GMail account, FReepmail me.
They're going fast!

15 posted on 09/20/2005 3:42:13 PM PDT by rdb3 (NON-conservative, American exceptionalist here.)
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To: Gipper08

Cut ALL the pork out of the budget and it would rebuild two New Orleans. Nothing so hard about that math.


21 posted on 09/20/2005 6:16:50 PM PDT by G-Man 1
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To: Gipper08
Try to insert <P> between two passages and see what happens. You will be amazed!
23 posted on 09/20/2005 9:20:22 PM PDT by A. Pole (Gov.Gumpas:"But that would be putting the clock back, have you no idea of progress, of development?")
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