Yeah, I know, we can't (supposedly) slash the budget immediately as that would impact the fledgling recovery. However, what kind of "leadership" is it that professes to make "difficult choices" while spending more . . . and more . . . and more.
Interesting though--liberal Democrats are playing this like it's the Republicans' fault:
Let's say he's right about Afghanistan. If we left tomorrow, we would still have a trillion dollar deficit, or nearly so, next year. So, I've seen other Democrats complain Republicans aren't taking on entitlements.
Who is in charge of 2/3 of the legislating/spending triangle (House/Senate/President)? Where is the Presidential leadership on entitlements?Andrew Sullivan has noticed:
I think the GOP, especially Ryan and Boehner, have made it clear they would be willing to deal on entitlements. It's not the GOP that has used Social Security as a club. The Democrats were the ones using animation of GWB pushing a woman in a wheelchair off a cliff, etc.
The problem is that Obama will not push too hard on his liberal base. They might have to give him this or that, but entitlement reform? No way. He's not going to do it, so we are looking at this:

Is Obama really this spineless?
The right thing to do would be to meet behind closed doors with Ryan, come to an agreement, then sell it to the American people over the howls of the far left (and probably some on the far right). It would, if done properly, guarantee him reelection and bring fiscal sanity to our country. Unfortunately, I think he is ideologically incapable of leaving liberal orthodoxy--big government is good government.
WaPo writer,Dana Milbanks, wasn't fooled either:
To live within our means would mean not spending more than we are bringing in. This budget doesn't come close.
And, no, I don't think this just became an issue. I've been railing about fiscal issues for a long time. GWB spent like a drunken sailor. Obama is spending like a meth addict who just found someone else's credit-card-filled wallet.
Can we get a grown-up in the White House? Please?
Interesting though--liberal Democrats are playing this like it's the Republicans' fault:
The federal deficit is growing at an alarming rate. Without some correction, our deficit will continue to explode. The deficit for the next two years is projected at more than $1 trillion annually, and the overall deficit projection for the next decade is more than $7 trillion. Deficits like this are unsustainable and only lead to a downward cycle of forcing us to take on more debt.
Not only do interest payments on this debt threaten to overwhelm the budget, but if our national debt continues to skyrocket to somewhere between 75 percent and 95 percent of gross domestic product over the next decade (far beyond the 60 percent that most economists consider the highest level of sustainable deficit), it threatens America’s credit rating. A downgrade in the country’s credit rating would create an economic crisis that would make the last two years seem like a dress rehearsal for something devastatingly bigger.
Voters understand this problem. A recent CBS poll found that 56 percent of the country realizes that the deficit needs immediate action. This is where things get tricky because Republicans have long believed that attacking the deficit should coincide with an attack on the social safety net through cuts to federally funded Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid and education.
Unfortunately for Republicans, hardly anyone seems to agree with them. CNN found last month that less than 25 percent of people support cuts from any of those areas in order to reduce the budget deficit. As a result, Republicans have instead pivoted to “deficit reduction” through cuts to nondefense discretionary spending.
In doing so, the GOP Conference leadership avoided identifying specific programs — worried that voters would balk once they knew which programs face cuts — and instead offered across-the-board cuts that avoid the hard choices. They coupled this with budget-busting tax cuts for the wealthiest 2 percent and an effort to repeal a health care law that would reduce the deficit by over $200 billion.
This is not a serious approach to reducing the deficit.
Nondefense discretionary spending makes up less than half of discretionary spending. More meaningful cuts should come from bloated defense spending, for example, a cut supported by 50 percent of the voters.
More importantly, the Republican rules package, the rules that the majority party sets for the House at the beginning of each Congress, specifically took the cost of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan off-budget. Stopping our enormous open-ended investment in Afghanistan would reduce our long-term debt by more than $1 trillion and do more to cut the deficit than any of the Republican Party’s supposed deficit reduction efforts, such as the Republican bill to end public financing of campaigns.
Rep. Tom Cole (R-Okla.), my colleague on the Budget Committee who introduced that bill — H.R. 359 — estimated that it would save $617 million over 10 years. That’s roughly the same savings we would realize in two days from ending our involvement in an endless war in Afghanistan. Every day we stay in Afghanistan, we add more than $325 million to our debt.
Let's say he's right about Afghanistan. If we left tomorrow, we would still have a trillion dollar deficit, or nearly so, next year. So, I've seen other Democrats complain Republicans aren't taking on entitlements.
Who is in charge of 2/3 of the legislating/spending triangle (House/Senate/President)? Where is the Presidential leadership on entitlements?Andrew Sullivan has noticed:
The crisis is the cost of future entitlements and defense, about which Obama proposes nothing. Yes, there's some blather. But Obama will not risk in any way any vulnerability on taxes to his right or entitlement spending to his left. He convened a deficit commission in order to throw it in the trash. If I were Alan Simpson or Erskine Bowles, I'd feel duped. And they were duped. All of us who took Obama's pitch as fiscally responsible were duped.
The cynical political calculation is obvious and it is well put by Yglesias and Sprung. If Obama backs Bowles-Simpson, the GOP will savage him for the tax hikes, while also scaring the wits out of the elderly on Medicare. The Democratic left - just look at HuffPo today - will have a cow. Indeed, if Obama backs anything, the GOP will automatically oppose him. He has to wait for a bipartisan agreement which he can then gently push ahead. But that's exactly why we are in this situation today.
I think the GOP, especially Ryan and Boehner, have made it clear they would be willing to deal on entitlements. It's not the GOP that has used Social Security as a club. The Democrats were the ones using animation of GWB pushing a woman in a wheelchair off a cliff, etc.
The problem is that Obama will not push too hard on his liberal base. They might have to give him this or that, but entitlement reform? No way. He's not going to do it, so we are looking at this:

Is Obama really this spineless?
Obama's game is transparent, isn't it? He is playing a game of chicken. He puts forward a series of proposals that he knows are more or less insane; but he also believes that Republicans will come to his rescue. They, not being wholly irresponsible, will come up with plans to reform entitlements--like, for example, the Ryan Roadmap. Ultimately, some combination of those plans will be implemented because the alternative is the collapse, not just of the government of the United States, but of the country itself. But Obama thinks the GOP's reforms will be unpopular, and he will be able to demagogue them, thus having his cake and eating it too. Is that leadership? Of course not. But it is the very essence of Barack Obama.
The right thing to do would be to meet behind closed doors with Ryan, come to an agreement, then sell it to the American people over the howls of the far left (and probably some on the far right). It would, if done properly, guarantee him reelection and bring fiscal sanity to our country. Unfortunately, I think he is ideologically incapable of leaving liberal orthodoxy--big government is good government.
WaPo writer,Dana Milbanks, wasn't fooled either:
Obama's budget proposal is a remarkably weak and timid document. He proposes to cut only $1.1 trillion from federal deficits over the next decade - a pittance when you consider that the deficit this year alone is in the neighborhood of $1.5 trillion. The president makes no serious attempt at cutting entitlement programs that threaten to drive the government into insolvency.
Contrast that with the proposal by the heads of Obama's fiscal commission, who outlined a way to cut $4 trillion from deficits through 2020, rein in entitlement spending, overhaul the tax code and reduce the government's debt load. As commission co-chair Erskine Bowles, former chief of staff in Bill Clinton's White House, told The Post's Lori Montgomery, Obama's budget is "nowhere near where they will have to go to resolve our fiscal nightmare."
ad_icon
The best explanation the White House has come up with, uttered privately, is that Obama didn't want to step out too far with politically unpopular cuts before congressional Republicans propose their own. And it's true that Republicans haven't yet committed to including entitlement reforms in their own 2012 budget. But even that doesn't justify Obama's feeble budget document, which squanders the little momentum built up by the fiscal commission.
As administration officials came out to defend the indefensible budget Monday, they had little to work with beyond cliches.
"The budget that we sent to Congress today is a responsible plan that shows that we can live within our means and we can also invest in the future," Lew began.
To live within our means would mean not spending more than we are bringing in. This budget doesn't come close.
And, no, I don't think this just became an issue. I've been railing about fiscal issues for a long time. GWB spent like a drunken sailor. Obama is spending like a meth addict who just found someone else's credit-card-filled wallet.
Can we get a grown-up in the White House? Please?