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Administration Introduces the "Budget of the Living Dead"
Washington,
D.C. - The following
is a written statement by Steve Ellis, Vice President
of Programs
at Taxpayers for Common Sense, on the 2006 federal
budget:
The
2006 budget proposal reminds me of a low-budget
zombie flick: no matter how many times they try to
cut these wasteful, scary programs, they keep coming
back from the grave to torment taxpayers. Let me be
clear, these wasteful and redundant programs will keep
coming back unless the administration is willing
to protect
their
budgets by driving the veto pen through the hearts
of some of these zombies.
Holding
down wasteful spending is more important now than
ever. In just a few weeks, Congress
is expected
to consider a supplemental bill to fund operations
in Iraq and Afghanistan. This bill, expected to cost
more than $80 billion, is the surprise villain of this
budget horror movie: everyone in the audience can see
him coming, but characters in the movie are taken by
surprise. Current deficit projections don’t include
this known expense, setting us up for another all too
predictable shocker.
Finding
religion on the budget deficit is all well and good,
but faith alone won’t
cut the deficit. For real change, the administration
must start defending
their budget proposal. Last year, the administration
proposed cutting or eliminating 128 programs, 65 of
which would be fully eliminated. Out of the 65, only
5 were actually killed. Even National League pitchers
have a better batting average!
If the administration wants to start
swinging for the budget deficit fences, they need
to start wielding
the veto pen. The President needs to keep Congress
in line by throwing bad bills back at them and telling
them to start from scratch. The president has never
vetoed a bill, but a spending bill would be a good
place to start. Sharply worded messages to Congress,
coupled with the sure knowledge that the President
will wield his veto power, would bring the sobering
fiscal restraint that we sorely lack. If the President
wants to cut the deficit in half and restore any fiscal
sanity to the budget process, there's really no other
solution.
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