creators.com opinion web
Liberal Opinion General Opinion
Tony Blankley
Tony Blankley
14 Dec 2011
Newt's Past and Future Leadership

Almost all political commentators agree on one thing. The Republican presidential campaign is unlike any we … Read More.

7 Dec 2011
Secular, Liberal Egypt: We Hardly Knew Ya

One of the nice things about human history is that no matter how much people or their leaders misjudge events … Read More.

30 Nov 2011
How to Break the Partisan Fever

Sunday on "Meet the Press" Colin Powell blamed divisive, poisonous Washington politics on the media … Read More.

Deficits, Promises and Destiny

Share Comment

In about a month, the Republican majority on the House Budget Committee will present its concurrent budget resolution for fiscal year 2012, which by law will include their proposed 2012 annual budget and their projection of the budgets (spending, revenues and the resulting deficit, surplus or balance) for the following nine years.

It may not be overstatement to assert that this presentation may determine whether Republicans win or lose the 2012 elections and whether the United States government acts in time to save our economic future from ruin.

A month ago, President Obama announced his budget proposal. It projected $7.2 trillion (adjusted to $9.4 trillion with later developments) to be added to the national debt over 10 years — and made no proposal to reduce the burgeoning growth of the annual deficit due to out-of-control cost rises in Medicare, Social Security, Medicaid and other entitlements. Even with unrealistically rosy economic projections — such as no recessions in next decade — the Office of Management and Budget still projected annual deficits of $774 billion in 2021.

Even the liberal media — from the Washington Post on down — harshly criticized the president's budget proposal as an abdication of leadership on the central domestic issue of our age. But many savvy Washington pros — both Democrats and Republicans — think that with this budget proposal, the president may have positioned himself to savage the GOP (and thus gain re-election) should the House GOP make any real effort at bringing the budget under control.

Can the House GOP propose a budget that brings the deficit under control? Even if we consider "control" to be less than 3 percent of GDP (rather than actual balance), it will be painfully difficult — and for some GOP freshman, supporting such a budget proposal will violate some of their campaign promises. Here is why.

Most Republican members of Congress promised not to raise taxes. Most promised to deal with the out-of-control deficits and debt. Many promised not to cut Social Security or Medicare.

That first promise, not to raise taxes, means that the Republican-proposed 10-year budget must keep the Bush tax cuts in place for all 10 years. If the Budget Committee does so, then the Congressional Budget Office (the official score keeper) will find that $2 trillion in revenues will be "lost" (notwithstanding that many of us believe that a supply-side marginal income tax cut dynamically increases economic activity (and thus federal revenues).

So, before the budget committee even starts reducing spending, it will be $2 trillion in the deficit hole (compared to Obama's position).

Most GOP members either promised or hinted at not cutting benefits on Social Security and minimal reductions of Medicare — at least for anyone 55 or over.

One hears steady rumors (but only rumors) that the GOP majority on the Budget Committee is not going to touch Social Security, will seek minimally greater market-based efficiencies for Medicare and do most of its entitlement cuts in Medicaid (health aid to the poor).

When they combine those efforts with keeping the Bush tax cuts for the entire 10 years, they will be hard-pressed to come in with a budget deficit in 2021 of less than half a trillion dollars.

More likely, they are looking at an annual deficit in 2021 of about $600 billion dollars — only $170 billion less than Obama's proposal.

So, to get the deficit down to a level that the world bond market — and GOP voters — consider to be under control, the House GOP will have to propose both letting the Bush tax cuts expire at some point and reducing net costs substantially on Social Security and Medicare.

If they do that, not only might many GOP and independent voters turn on their GOP congressmen in November 2012, but the members may also thereby break their promises not to raise taxes, nor touch Social Security, etc. What should the GOP do?

Back in the 1980 presidential campaign, Ronald Reagan made three major promises: 1) Increase our military strength, 2) cut income taxes and 3) reduce the budget deficit. Fortunately for Reagan, he had the foresight during the campaign to give his priorities to those three promises (in the order I have listed them). He was able to keep Nos. 1 and 2, but could not keep the budget-cutting promise.

Today, there are three objectives or promises that many Republican congressmen have: 1) Get the deficit and national debt under control, 2) don't raise taxes and 3) protect full benefits of Social Security and most of Medicare for those over 55.

The GOP will have to decide which of those laudable objectives have priority over the others — because I would be amazed (but delighted) if they can keep any two of them, let alone all three.

For me, the overwhelming historical obligation of our government — and the reason the Republicans were given the majority in the House — was to get the deficit and debt under control.

The GOP will risk losing its majority either if they propose coming in with a half-trillion-dollar deficit in the 10th out year — or if they propose getting the deficit down by lowering costs of Social Security and Medicare and letting Bush tax cuts expire.

They should listen to the command of history and take their chances with the electorate by proposing to solve the fiscal crisis — even at the price of not honoring their subordinate promises.

Tony Blankley is executive vice president of Edelman public relations in Washington. E-mail him at TonyBlankley@gmail.com. To find out more about Tony Blankley and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com.

COPYRIGHT 2011 CREATORS.COM


Comments

1 Comments | Post Comment
First eliminate agencies not authorized by the Constitution:
Departments of Energy, Education, Housing and Urban Development, Transportation, EPA (every State has their own EPA), Agriculture, etc.
But what about those 800 pound gorillas?
There is no Constitutional authority for Social Security or Medicare - but they exist and have an exceedingly powerful political constituency - so what is to be done about them?
The answer is simple; they are illegal Ponzi schemes - deal with them as with any other Ponzi scheme: Seize the assets of the Ponzi scheme operator, put those assets into receivership, and auction them off to pay off the victims. The US central government (the Ponzi scheme operator) owns 30% of the onshore US and essentially all of the gas and oil rich continental shelf off of America's shores. Sell just enough of these properties each year to pay off the Ponzi scheme victims. If more were sold than this minimum, Congress would immediately spend it, just as they have spent the Social Security "surplus" tax increases created by the 1982 Greenspan Commission.
Ending FICA taxes now would give every worker a non-inflationary 15.3% wage increase (non-inflationary since no money supply increase is involved).
In addition to paying off the Ponzi victims, this would put scores of trillions of dollars of currently sterile Federalie resources in private hands. The Social Security / Medicare generation is probably the only group that is politically powerful enough to privitize these lands.
To eliminate Federalie interference in the development of the continental shelf lands, allow the purchaser the option of that land being regulated by the nearest State rather than the central government.
This neatly cuts two Gordian knots with one blow - the Social Security / Medicare entitlement problem and the central government owning so much of America problem. This solution would create a huge economic boom (not a bubble because there would be no money supply increase).
Let the auction begin!
Durk Pearson, MIT '65
Comment: #1
Posted by: dpearson
Wed Mar 16, 2011 9:52 AM
Already have an account? Log in.
New Account  
Your Name:
Your E-mail:
Your Password:
Confirm Your Password:

Please allow a few minutes for your comment to be posted.

Enter the numbers to the right:  
Creators.com comments policy
More
Tony Blankley
Dec. `11
Su Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa
27 28 29 30 1 2 3
4 5 6 7 8 9 10
11 12 13 14 15 16 17
18 19 20 21 22 23 24
25 26 27 28 29 30 31
About the author About the author
Write the author Write the author
Printer friendly format Printer friendly format
Email to friend Email to friend
View by Month
Author’s Podcast
Mark Levy
Mark LevyUpdated 26 May 2012
Oliver North
Oliver NorthUpdated 25 May 2012
Linda Chavez
Linda ChavezUpdated 25 May 2012

12 Sep 2007 The War On Terror Six Years On

26 Mar 2008 More Than Bluebirds in the Sky

26 May 2010 West of the Potomac, GOP Hopes Rise