20 July 2011

Dear Speaker Boehner

House Speaker John Boehner
1011 Longworth H.O.B.
Washington, DC  20515
(202) 225-6205
(202) 225-0704 fax

Dear Speaker Boehner,

As a Republican, I have followed your handling of the debt ceiling negotiations, and the future of the federal budget, with mounting concern.  You appear to be engaged in a game of partisan brinksmanship with our nation’s financial future.  Now is not the time for scoring political points or playing to the fantasies of the anti-government libertarian zealots within our Party.
Your handling of the debt ceiling negotiations, and the prior budget proposals advanced in Representative Paul Ryan’s “Path to Prosperity,” makes it clear that the GOP is more concerned with protecting the interests of America’s most wealthy citizens, even to the detriment of the rest of us, and to the common good.  For example, it is farcical to frame the debt and the deficit as merely problems of spending — they are, in fact, issues created by both expenditures and revenues.  Nor is taking an axe to the federal government an acceptable solution — traditionally, we conservatives have been in favor of a limited government, not an eviscerated one.   In the end, we simply have to pay for the services we expect government to provide.  As such, a discussion of raising additional revenue — taxes — must be a part of any long-term solution.

Effective tax rates for all income brackets in America are at or near historically low levels.  Our corporations benefit from one of the lowest effective rates of taxation in the industrialized world.  And yet, under your leadership, Congressional Republicans have dug in their heals and — for the most part — refused to consider closing tax loopholes for big business or, most importantly, raising income tax rates for the wealthiest Americans.

Such a solution, coupled with spending reductions and entitlement reform, is just and equitable.  It recognizes two fundamental realities: first, that corporate profits have increased during the present “recovery” even as wages, and hiring, have not.  Second, that the top 1% of income earners in America have amassed an increasing share of our nation’s wealth over the past several decades while wages for most Americans have stagnated or declined.

In the Book of Genesis, God famously asked, “Cain, where is your brother Abel?”  This question still resonates today — it reminds us of our duty to care for the poor, the elderly, the disabled, and the most marginalized elements in society.  Does the Republican Party no longer see any role for government in providing for these groups? That certainly seems to be the case given the spending cuts proposed by Congressman Ryan.  While some entitlement reform is necessary, the cuts in Rep. Ryan’s plan amounted to a repudiation of our collective responsibilities towards our fellow citizens.  Speaker Boehner, do Congressional Republicans know where their brother Abel is today?

Every American understands that sacrifices are necessary.  But sacrifices demand a balancing of benefits and burdens.  Is it right and just that those Americans who have benefited the most from the economic growth over the past 30 years and from the recovery should see their burdens lightened in this time of fiscal crisis while those who have benefited the least — average Americans who have seen their jobs outsourced overseas, their wages stagnate or decline, their benefits reduced — are told to carry an additional share?  I think the answer is obvious: it is not.

The debt, the deficit, the budget — these are grave matters of huge importance for the future of our nation.  The pain created by addressing these issues cannot be disproportionately placed upon the poor, the elderly, and the middle class.  Spending cuts and entitlement reform must be coupled with proposals to raise additional revenue and to create a more equitable balancing of the burdens created by the need for budgetary retrenchment and fiscal austerity.  The rich can, and must, be asked to make additional sacrifices.

And remember, a political party that ignores the interests of the middle class, that eschews any notion of economic justice or responsibility for the common good, and that imperils the soundness of the public credit in dealing with these issues, faces a problematic future indeed.

Michael Stafford
Republicans for Responsible Reform

17 July 2011

The Budget Impasse.

Why is the USA in such fiscal straits? President Clinton left a surplus. As a matter of fact, Alan Greenspan concluded in a Budget Committee hearing on 25 January 2001 (5 days after GW Bush took office) that he projected a huge budget SURPLUS over the next decade of 5.6 trillion dollars. He recommended a tax cut. (Coincidentally, the US debt was about 5.6 trillion dollars at the time of his statement). Congress gleefully jumped at the opportunity. They didn't listen to his caveat. He may be wrong in his projections and the Congress should be prepared to reverse direction and raise taxes back up if the surplus disappeared. They instead ran up an 11.4 trillion dollar spending spree on unfunded Medicare Part D, two wars, gigantic tax cuts...and pushed us into the greatest economic challenge in two generations...leaving our current President to clean the Augean stables.  Unfortunately, he isn't Hercules.


It's amazing that the Republicans are now calling for a balanced budget amendment...but when the budget was last in balance, they called for huge tax breaks and off the books spending on wars and unfunded mandates.


Balanced budget amendments have been touted by Republicans for a long while.  Reagan talked it up, big time...but he never submitted anything approaching a balanced budget, nor did Bush X2...Clinton (a Democratic president you may remember), did what the Republicans wouldn't.




Talk is so cheap.

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