House
Republicans Get Behind Budget Agreement
House Republicans are
rallying behind a modest budget pact that promises to bring a temporary halt to
budget brinkmanship in Washington and ease automatic budget cuts that would
otherwise slam the Pentagon and domestic agencies for a second straight year.
At the same time,
President Barack Obama and Senate Democrats are praising the measure negotiated
with House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan, R-Wis., who morphed from an
uncompromising small-government stalwart into a divided-Washington dealmaker in
order to claim a partial victory on the budget.
The deal Ryan
negotiated with Senate Budget Committee Chairwoman Patty Murray, D-Wash., would
preserve the bulk of tough agency spending cuts the GOP won in a 2011 showdown
with Obama, while greatly reducing the chances of a rerun of the politically
debilitating partial government shutdown that the GOP stumbled into in October.
The measure, which was
set for a vote Thursday, seemed sure to pass, despite unhappiness on the part
of House Democrats cut out of the talks and also upset that it didn't contain a
provision to renew jobless benefits for the long-term unemployed.
Nobody was claiming
that the pact between the high-profile Ryan, his party's vice presidential
nominee last year, and the tough-but-shrewd Murray, a 21-year veteran of the
Senate, was perfect. It would ease $63 billion in scheduled spending cuts over
the next two years and replace them with longer-term savings measured over 10
years, many of which won't accumulate until 2022-23. Deficits would increase by
$23.2 billion in 2014 and by $18.2 billion the year after that.
But the deal would put
a dysfunctional Washington on track to prevent unappealing cuts to military
readiness and weapons, as well as continued cuts to programs cherished by
Democrats and Republicans alike, including health research, school aid, FBI
salaries and border security. The cuts would be replaced with money from —
among other things — higher airline security fees, curbs on the pension
benefits of new federal workers or working-age military retirees, and premium
increases on companies whose pension plans are insured by the federal
government.
Ryan said Thursday the
accommodation was modest but that it moves a fiscally challenged and divided
government "in the right direction."
In appearances on
morning news shows, he said the political deal was necessary to help get the
economy on a firmer footing at a time when the Federal Reserve Board apparently
is set to wind down its bond-buying stimulus program.
Ryan called it a start
toward fiscal responsibility while acknowledging that "I don't see any
difference in the likelihood of a grand bargain" on taxes and spending.
Sen. Jeff Sessions of
Alabama, the top Republican on the Senate Budget Committee, said that
"much of the spending increase in this deal has been justified by
increased fees and new revenue. In other words, it's a fee increase to fuel a
spending increase, rather than reducing deficits."
The Ryan-Murray pact
uses a combination of mostly low-profile cuts and the new fee revenues, much of
which won't occur until after the turn of the next decade, to ease cuts
mandated by the inability of Congress and the White House to follow up a 2011
budget pact with additional deficit cuts.
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