No more sacred cows, Congress: Put everything on the budget-cuts table
Republicans, it's time to put defense spending on the table. Democrats, take down the walls around Social Security and Medicare.
A cow chills out on the median strip of a major New Delhi street. Sacred cows are free to go wherever they wish, creating challenges for drivers, bikers, and pedestrians. U.S. politicians are just as hands-off with their metaphorical sacred cows of spending. They are different on the two sides of the aisle, but once they've all been 'taken off the table,' Congress has little space in which to balance budget.
Scott Baldauf / 海角大神 / File
Even defense spending, even tax expenditures. I did this , with my 12-year-old son Johnny watching me in the makeup room and from the 鈥済reen room鈥濃搘hich made it all the more special. One of my standard favorite lines I didn鈥檛 get to squeeze in about the politicians鈥 take on fiscal responsibility and reducing the deficit: 鈥淚t seems like a good idea鈥ntil you get right down to it鈥濃搃.e., it鈥檚 always easier in abstract theory than in specific practice.
As both Jim Horney (of the Center for Budget and Policy Priorities) and I emphasize in the interview, everything should be on the budget-cuts table, and in fact, many in Congress like to use that line. But then you listen more carefully and you find Republicans taking revenue increases and defense/national security cuts off the table, and Democrats taking most other types of spending off the table (whether for short-term or longer-term reasons), and you soon realize that what鈥檚 really left on the 鈥渂ipartisan deficit-reduction table鈥濃揳t least within the current Congress鈥搃s really close to nothing. And that鈥檚 a huge problem: the contrast between what non-politician budget experts from both the left and the right agree on, and what Congress 肠补苍鈥檛 agree on.
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