Posted on 03/22/2018 1:30:09 PM PDT by Sopater
When we rush to pass bill that a lot of us dont understand, we are not doing our job. ~Speaker Paul Ryan, 2015
This is it. For this budget bill, Republicans had sole possession of the ball, and of course, they have tossed an interception. The only question now is whether Trump will need to hear a raucous rebellion from his voters before he changes his mind and finally uses his veto pen.
Rather than spending the weeks leading up to the budget deadline outlining their vision for the country in terms of spending priorities and policies, the GOP used the time to promote the possibility of including a number of Democratic priorities. This point was best articulated by Rep. Thomas Massie:
How ironic that Republicans will pass what is likely to be their last major bill before losing Congress by violating their pledge to America in 2010, when they captured Congress, promising to post all legislation for 72 hours before a vote.
Dont be fooled: This bill isnt OK just because Republicans could have crammed even more Democratic priorities into it, but didnt. Now that items such as the internet sales tax, official legislative amnesty for Dreamers, and the insurance bailout have been left out of the bill, some might consider this bill a victory. It isnt. Its a colossal betrayal. This bill is the final nail in the coffin of all the promises on health care spending and immigration they ran on in 2016. And as for the bailout and internet sales tax, they are fully committed to those items in a standalone bill rather than properly articulating a vision on those issues for the American people.
Taken in totality, this bill validates, legitimizes, and codifies the world view of the Democrats, only with slightly less enthusiasm. Which is why the Democrats are crushing Republicans in turnout so far this election season. This bill will essentially end Republican control of Congress.
Here are the top 10 problems with the bill:
1) Eye-popping debt: This bill codifies the $143 billion busting of the budget caps, which Congress adopted in February, for the remainder of this fiscal year. This is on top of the fact that government spending already increased $130 billion last year over the final year of Obamas tenure. Although the Trump administration already agreed to this deal in February, the OMB put out a memo suggesting that Congress appropriate only $10 billion of the extra $63 billion in non-defense discretionary spending. Now its up to Trump to follow through with a veto threat. Its not just about 2018. This bill paves the road to permanently bust the budget caps forever, which will lead to trillions more in spending and cause interest payments on the debt to surge past the cost of the military or even Medicaid in just eight years.
Keep in mind that all the additional spending will be stuffed into just six months remaining to the fiscal year, not a 12-month period. A number of onerous bureaucracies will get cash booster shots instead of the cuts President Trump wanted.
Remember when Mick Mulvaney said the fiscal year 2017 budget betrayal was needed so that he could do great things with the fiscal year 2018 budget? Good times.
2) Bait and switch on the wall: Since this bill increases spending for everything, one would think that at least the president would get the $15 billion or so needed for the wall. No. The bill includes only $641 million for 33 miles of new border fencing but prohibits that funding for being used for concrete barriers. My understanding is that President Trump already has enough money to begin construction for roughly that much of the fence, and pursuant to the Secure Fence Act, he can construct any barrier made from any This actually weakens current law.
3) Funds sanctuary cities: When cities and states downright violate federal law and harbor illegal aliens, Congress silence in responding to it is deafening. Cutting off block grants to states as leverage against this dangerous crisis wasnt even under discussion, even as many other extraneous and random liberal priorities were seriously considered.
4) Doesnt fund interior enforcement: Along with clamping down on sanctuary cities, interior enforcement at this point is likely more important than a border wall. After Obamas tenure left us with a criminal alien and drug crisis, there is an emergency to ramp up interior enforcement. Trump requested more ICE agents and detention facilities, but that call was ignored in this bill. Trump said that the midterms must focus on Democrats dangerous immigration policies. Well, this bill he is supporting ensures that they will get off scot-free.
5) Doesnt defund court decisions: Some might suggest that this bill was a victory because at least it didnt contain amnesty. But we have amnesty right now, declared, promulgated, and perpetuated by the lawless judiciary. For Congress to pass a budget bill and not defund DACA or defund the issuance of visas from countries on Trumps immigration pause list in order to fight back against the courts is tantamount to Congress directly passing amnesty.
6) Funds Planned Parenthood: We have no right to a border wall or more ICE funding, but somehow funding for a private organization harvesting baby organs was never in jeopardy or even under discussion as a problem.
7) Gun control without due process: Some of you might think Im being greedy, demanding that extraneous policies be placed in a strict appropriations bill. Well, gun control made its way in. They slipped in the Fix NICS bill, which pressures and incentivizes state and federal agencies to add more people to the system even though there is already bipartisan recognition that agencies are adding people who should not be on the list, including veterans, without any due process in a court of law. They are passing this bill without the House version of the due process protections and without the promised concealed carry reciprocity legislation. Republicans were too cowardly to have an open debate on such an important issue, so they opted to tack it onto a budget bill, which is simply unprecedented. The bill also throws more funding at school violence programs when they refuse to repeal the gun-free zone laws that lie at the root of the problem.
8) More opioid crisis funding without addressing the problem: The bill increases funding for opioid addiction prevention and treatment by $2.8 billion relative to last year, on top of the $7 billion they already spent in February. This is the ultimate joke of the arsonist pretending to act as the firefighter, because as weve chronicled in detail, these funds are being used to clamp down on legitimate prescription painkillers and create a de facto national prescription registry so that government can violate privacy and practice medicine. Meanwhile, the true culprits are illicit drugs and Medicaid expansion, exacerbated by sanctuary cities, as the president observed himself. Yet those priorities are jettisoned from the bill.
9) Student loan bailout: The bill offers $350 million in additional student loan forgiveness but only for graduates who take lower-paid government jobs or work for some non-profits! This was a big priority of Sen. Elizabeth Warren. Government created this problem of skyrocketing student debt by fueling it with subsidies and giving the higher education cartel a monopoly of accreditation, among other things. Indeed, this very same bill increases Pell grants by $2 billion. But more money is always the solution, especially when it helps future government workers.
10) Schumers Gateway projects earmark: Conservatives had a wish list of dozens of items, but its Schumers local bridge and tunnel project that got included. While the bill didnt contain as much as Schumer asked for (remember the tactic of starting off high), the program would qualify for up to $541 million in new transportation funding. Also, the bill would open up $2.9 billion in grants through the Federal Transit Administration for this parochial project that should be dealt with on a state level. New York has high taxes for a reason.
We already knew what Republicans in Congress would do. This is their modus operandi. The only new element in this toxic brew is President Trump. Voters selected him over allies of congressional leaders precisely because they wanted him to wield a heavy veto pen. If he signs this bill, he is just as complicit with the swamp as the people he defeated.
That’s what the GOP does best...sells us out.
BOHICA.
if we have yo shut down the government we will but we will build that wall donald j. Trump. To get my vote!!
All of those suck, but #9 is a real turd in the punchbowl - rewarding those with student loan forgiveness who will be leftie govt and nonprofit stooges.
What a kick in the shins to hard working taxpayers.
I can’t wait until Ryan leaves.
There’s only 10?
11. Adds back all the funding cut from the IRS over the Lois Learner scandal and is even over $400 million more than President Trump requested.
I was leaning toward voting in the congressional election this November.
"I know how to get the rest to lie less."
Wouldn’t it be better to have a list on when the Republicans Did NOT sell us out??
There is no question Ryan and McConnell simply gave up and surrendered here. However, it is important to also add context. This is an election year. This is an election year budget.
Not excusing their ducking the hard votes, but what I think they did was simply to take the easy (cowardly?) way out and then try and get Trump to make the hard vetoes and blame him for any certain political fallout.
Right now the deck is stacked against Republicans. If they simply hold the line on spending then the NYTimes, the WaPo, CNNNBCABCCBS, and all the others show individual Republicans as pushing grandma off a cliff while forced to eat dog food.
I am certainly not happy the way they weaseled out of any responsibility whatsoever, but context is also needed. I would be somewhat comforted if I knew they would fix much of this after the election. They won’t. Therefore there is little solace to be had.
Yes, there are more. What about the 30 to 60 billion to the insurance companies for rate stabilization which is propping up much of the Obamacare regulatory burden, for instance.
White House just tweeted:
President Trump has succeeded in securing funding for priorities that protect and support all Americans.
So, no veto should be expected.
Conservatives vote, too. But they wont this year.
It’s what the gop wants.
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