In The News

Deficit groups demand supercommittee secrets (The Hill)

TCS RSS Feed RSS
December 05, 2011
Programs:

A coalition of good government groups on Monday demanded that the president and congressional leaders reveal all the details of the various secret deficit negotiations that have taken place this year including that of the failed supercommittee.

The groups wrote to President Obama, House Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio) and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) saying that making secret offers and counteroffers will help the country reach a deficit deal eventually.

“The failure of the Joint Select Committee on Deficit Reduction to achieve agreement does not end the important work to tame our deficit and debt. In that spirit, we believe it is time for the American public to see the Committee’s final work products as well as the proposals developed during Vice President Biden’s deficit reduction talks over the summer. We urge you to release them online to the public,” the letter states.

The supercommittee disbanded on Nov. 21 after failing to find any deficit savings. Over the summer, the Biden talks produced trillions in potential cuts that similarly never materialized. Obama and Boehner separately tried and failed to negotiate a $4 trillion deficit reduction deal.

A three efforts stumbled over Democratic demands for large tax increases and a Republican refusal to consider much revenue other than that generated by fostering economic growth.

Taxpayers for Common Sense, the Project on Government Oversight, the Center for Responsive Politics, the Heartland Institute, the Sunlight Foundation, Citizens Against Government Waste, and Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington.

The deficit hawk community has been somewhat divided on the issue of secrecy with some hawks arguing that secrecy is necessary to preserve the flexibility needed to allow an eventual compromise.  

Deficit groups demand supercommittee secrets (The Hill)

Discussion
Weekly Wastebasket

Our weekly reality-check for federal spending. View All

September 13, 2013

Syria: Excuse 535 To Not Cut the Deficit

Volume XVIII No. 37 Possible action in Syria has become the most recent excuse du jour for Pentagon boosters... Read More