The U.S. Senate passed a $1.1trillion infrastructure spending bill with a vote of 69-30 – all 50 Democrat Senators and 19 Republican Senators. The 19 Republicans included Alaskan Senators, Lisa Murkowski and Dan Sullivan. Alaskan voters may be forced to get rid of Sullivan once they vote Murkowski out in 2022. The infrastructure bill is filled with all the spending priorities of the liberals.
Now that the Senate passed the infrastructure
bill, the Senators will now consider a budget resolution. Mathew Dickerson
wrote that the budget resolution “if enacted, will clear a path to implement a
massive progressive agenda. This resolution would reshape the American economy
and permanently expand government control over many aspects of peoples’ lives.”
He listed nine things that we “need to know about this budget resolution.”
1. Kickstarts the Process to Pass
Controversial and Harmful Polices on a Partisan Basis
The primary motivation behind this budget
resolution is to kick off the budget reconciliation process. Budget
reconciliation allows legislation affecting spending, revenue, or debt limit to
pass the Senate with limited debate and by
51 votes instead of being subject to the
normal 60-vote threshold….
2. Raises Revenue, Makes Misleading
Claims, and Gives Congress Unchecked Authority to Increase Taxes
Senate Budget Committee Chairman Bernie
Sanders said in a press release, “Under this budget, however, no family making
under $400,000 a year will pay a penny more in taxes and will, in fact, receive
one of the largest tax cuts in American history.” This statement is false.
Although President Joe Biden has misleadingly
claimed that his child allowance proposal would provide a tax cut, Heritage
Foundation analysts Robert Rector and James Hall have shown that, “when fully
implemented, the plan offers no tax relief at all. Instead, the essential
impetus is to fully and permanently eliminate work requirements and work
incentives from the existing child tax credit program….
Instead of tax relief for working families,
the reconciliation bill contemplated by this budget will include damaging tax
increases borne by middle-income families….
In fact, the reconciliation instructions
give the congressional committees with jurisdiction over the tax code an
unlimited ability to increase taxes while avoiding the filibuster. Further,
this budget includes an entire reserve fund dedicated to, essentially,
increasing tax burdens on every employer and innovator in the country….
3. Reckless Spending Spree
Democrats’ own estimates are that this budget
would increase federal spending by more than $4.16 trillion through fiscal year
2031. However, it’s also important to see how much they want to increase
spending in just the first year: at least $1.75 trillion.
4. Path to a Debt Crisis
Not only would this plan increase the
publicly held debt by more than $4.16 trillion, bringing it to more than 118%
of gross domestic product, but it would leave us with well over $2.2 trillion
annual deficits by fiscal year 2031 just on the net interest for the federal
debt.
5. Recipe for Inflation
While some of the recent trend of higher
inflation is related to the pandemic, it is mostly the result of our reckless
federal fiscal policy – which this budget would double down on….
To compound this crisis, the Federal Reserve
would likely print trillions of more dollars to finance a portion of this
deficit spending….
The exponentially higher rates of deficit
spending, taxation, and money printing that would result from this budget would
only serve to exacerbate the current inflationary trend.
6. Breaking Biden’s Infrastructure Promise
During this summer’s negotiations over the
bipartisan infrastructure bill, many conservatives warned that any concessions
made by Democrats would be undone by using reconciliation to get the rest of
what the left wants for urban transit and passenger rail.
To keep Republicans at the negotiating
table, Biden said he was willing to give up some of the transportation spending
that he wanted, and reserve reconciliation for areas not related to
infrastructure….
The Senate budget resolution breaks this
promise by giving $60 billion in reconciliation instructions to the House Transportation
and Infrastructure Committee, on top of the $1.1 trillion infrastructure deal….
This shows that months of infrastructure
negotiations were done in bad faith.
7. Loopholes and Gimmicks
The point of a budget is to establish
responsible fiscal priorities and set up guardrails to assure Congress meets
those goals.
However, this budget resolution is filled
with loopholes and gimmicks that will make it easier to increase spending….
8. Mistaken Priorities
Despite the trillions in higher spending
in this budget resolution, it still manages to shortchange the core
constitutional responsibility of national security….
9. Fails to Address the Biggest Fiscal
Challenges
This budget resolution fails to tackle the
nation’s most important fiscal challenges, while likely making future reforms
to forestall a crisis even more difficult. Any meaningful fiscal reform must
tackle the unsustainable entitlement programs, including Medicare, Medicaid,
subsidies for private health insurance, and Social Security….
Dickerson includes much more
information with charts to show detail. I encourage you to go to his article to find more information. His conclusion is that “Congress must reject this budget
resolution” and “follow a responsible fiscal path that begins to confront the
problem of overspending and a federal government that is already too burdensome
and unsustainable.”
I do not have hope that Congress will reject this budget resolution because Democrats will stick together to pass it. With the 50 Democrats, plus the Vice President, they have the 51 votes necessary to succeed. Republicans lost their ability to stop it when they voted for the infrastructure bill. We might as well say “Hello to inflation” and apologize to our posterity for the stupidity of this Congress.
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