Paul Revere by Cyrus Dallin, North End, Boston

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Friday, March 1, 2013

Sequestration Facts

And yes, Bob Woodward WILL regret making an ass of himself in the op-ed piece he wrote, because everyone now understands he didn't get the sequestration issue correct, and no one "threatened" him with anything except the possibility that he would look foolish. Q.E.D.

Thomas Mann and Norm Ornstein of the Washington Post give us the facts [not the drama]:


1. Blame Obama — the sequester was his White House’s idea. 


"In our view, what happened is quite straightforward: In 2011, House Republican leaders used their new majority to force their priorities on the Democratically controlled Senate and the president by holding the debt limit hostage to demands for deep and immediate spending cuts. After negotiations between Obama and House Speaker John A. Boehner failed (Eric Cantor recently took credit for scuttling a deal), the parties at the eleventh hour settled on a two-part solution: immediate discretionary spending caps that would result in cuts of almost $1 trillion over 10 years; and the creation of a “supercommittee” tasked with reducing the 2012-2021 deficit by another $1.2 trillion to $1.5 trillion. 

The sequester’s origins can’t be blamed on one person — or one party. Republicans insisted on a trigger for automatic cuts; Jack Lew, then the White House budget director, suggested the specifics, modeled after a sequester-like mechanism Congress used in the 1980s, but with automatic tax increases added. Republicans rejected the latter but, at the time, took credit for the rest. 

Obama took the deal to get a debt-ceiling increase. But the president never accepted the prospect that the sequester would occur, nor did he ever agree to take tax increases off the table. 



 2.) At least the automatic cuts will reduce runaway spending and begin to control the deficit. 

 What runaway spending? 

The $787 billion stimulus was a one-time expenditure that has come and gone. Under current law not including the sequester, non-defense discretionary spending as a share of the economy will shrink to a level not seen in 50 years. Defense spending grew substantially over the past decade, but that pattern has slowed and will soon end. Additional reductions must be achieved intelligently, tied to legitimate national security needs. Across-the-board cuts can have perverse effects on deficits; as services are cut, the fees users pay for those services are lost. For example, sequester-driven furloughs of air-traffic controllers will lead to the number of flights being reduced.



3. The amounts are so small, they won’t hurt much.

 The size of the automatic cuts this fiscal year, $85 billion, looks trivial compared with our $3.7 trillion federal budget. As Post columnist George F. Will has written: “Head for the storm cellar — spending will be cut 2.3 percent! Or: Washington chain-saw massacre — we must scrape by on 97.7 percent of current spending!”

 4. The cuts are so large, they will be catastrophic.

 The administration has released state-by-state estimates of the sequester and highlighted the cutbacks most likely to harm or inconvenience the public. The reality is not so immediate or dramatic. The damage will accumulate in less visible ways, as irrational reductions in public spending impede economic growth and job creation; reduce investments in education, infrastructure and scientific research; and further disrupt the routines of a modern democracy. The longer the sequester remains in place, the more harm is inflicted.

 5. This fight is all about money.

 Those who relish using a sequester — some House Republicans, along with a gaggle of radio talk-show hosts, editorial writers and cable television commentators — say this is one small step toward reducing U.S. deficits and debt. But if the goal were really debt reduction, it would be easy to get a bipartisan deal that would lower the debt enough to meet the original target set by the Simpson-Bowles fiscal commission, with roughly a third coming from revenue. The insistence on deep discretionary-spending reductions while calling for even deeper tax cuts shows that the sequester is not about money but about taking a meat ax to government as we know it."


The GOP's plan to obfuscate and obstruct and then blame the president is in plain view.  Whatever pain we as a country may suffer if the trigger is pulled, we can thank the people who would rather be loyal to party purity than to the American people.

And remember this:  The Republicans gave an oath to the man whose plan is to reduce the size of government in order to drown it in a bathtub.  Their goal is to destroy government and take the country into the wilderness, then blame the government for failing in its responsibilities to the American people.

We are a nation of 300 million people who are interdependent in our common well being.  Destroying the government in the way the GOP extremists hope to destroy it will  bring catastrophe to all of us.

We have met the enemy, and they are us!

8 comments:

skudrunner said...

This should be a non event but the WH and their scare campaign will work. He will be successful blaming the republicans and kicking the can down the road.

Is BHO ever going to lead or is he just going to campaign for the next four years?

At least his golf game is solid.

Les Carpenter said...

The real deal is this... Both parties have figured out the best way to power is through fear and continual feeding of fear. Until such time as the 300 million plus citizens figure out that they are being played like a fiddle We the People will continue to get screwed. Wake up people, neither the rEpublican or the dEmocratic party is your friend. The time has arrived for a multiple (as in 3 or more) party system.

The choice is ours. The only question is what we will do with it.

Anonymous said...

Republicans put us in this sequester position, but the so called "neutral" voices blame both (Obama) sides HA HA HA HA HA

Les Carpenter said...

Yes aNon, Ha, Ha, Ha. Question for you, if you're up to it.

Have you ever had an original idea of your own? Is your purpose merely to degrade your intellectual superiors. Is your purpose to create nothing more than negativity? Do YOU have any ideas or suggestions as to how to solve/ resolve our MUTUAL problems?

Fire away of you have anything except blanks.

S.W. Anderson said...

". . . . The insistence on deep discretionary-spending reductions while calling for even deeper tax cuts shows that the sequester is not about money but about taking a meat ax to government as we know it."

It's at least equally about resentment, spite and seeking political advantage — selfish stupidity at its worst.

". . . we can thank the people who would rather be loyal to party purity than to the American people."

The tea-partyized Republican Party has no demonstrated interest in serving the American public as a whole. George W. Bush, at Karl Rove's direction I'm sure, set the precedent: dance with the ones that brung you. Bush made it clear practically from the beginning of his reign of error that he had little interest in trying to win the loyalty of most Americans. He was about serving the components of his political base and the special interests that finance Republican campaigns and the right-wing noise machine. Everyone else could like it or lump it.

Resentment, spite and seeking political advantage are no good for running a great country, except into the ground. We need to reverse the electoral mistake of 2010 and get much more traction in more state governments, before they do run this country into the ground.

Nomad said...

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I couldn't find any way to contact you directly but let me know if you ever feel like being a guest writer at my blog:

http://nomadicpolitics.blogspot.com/


Shaw Kenawe said...

Hello Nomad,

you can reach me here:

shawkenawe@yahoo.com

I'm interested.

Unknown said...

I do not understand all the fuss and bother over a 4% cut...

My own family has cut more than that over the past four years.

Does anybody really think there is not at least 4% of waste in our federal government?

We The People are being screwed, and it is a bi-partisan assault.