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Improving GOP Senate Outlook, Walz’s COVID Catastrophe, Schumer Derelict on Spending

September 24, 2024 by GregC

Listen to “Improving GOP Senate Outlook, Walz’s COVID Catastrophe, Schumer Derelict on Spending” on Spreaker.

Join Jim and Greg as they look at how the GOP’s odds for a U.S. Senate majority seem to be improving, how Tim Walz was a massive failure on COVID deaths in nursing homes and much more, and how Chuck Schumer utterly failed to do his most important job – but will still emerge as a winner.

First, they welcome a new Scott Rasmussen poll (different than Rasmussen Reports) that shows Montana Republican Senate candidate Tim Sheehy with a growing lead over incumbent Democrat Jon Tester. And several other races are inching further in the direction of Republicans. They also rail against the media for constantly labeling Democrats like Pennsylvania’s Bob Casey and Virginia’s Tim Kaine as “moderates” even though they vote along with the Biden administration’s position almost all the time.

Next, they discuss reporting that shows Minnesota’s nursing home death rate from COVID was the worst in the nation under Tim Walz, due in large part to his demand that those facilities accept COVID patients after they left the hospital. Jim points out that mainstream media seem thoroughly uninterested in Walz’s actual record as governor and are much more content to lazily play into the image of him as a regular guy.

Finally, they groan as Congress appears on the verge of another continuing resolution to keep the government open. But they also highlight Speaker Mike Johnson’s point that the House passed 12 separate appropriations bills in committee – also known as regular order – and the Senate ignored the House legislation and passed no spending bills on its own. So Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer didn’t do anything to fulfill the most important function of the legislative branch.

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Filed Under: congress, COVID-19, Economy, Elections, History, Humor, Journalism, law, News & Politics, Regulations, Spending, Transgender Tagged With: #nursinghomes, #regularorder, 3MartiniLunch, appropriations, Casey, COVID, Johnson, Kaine, Minnesota, moderates, polls, Schumer, Senate, Sheehy, Speaker, spending, Tester, Walz

Breaking Down the Budget Battle

May 26, 2017 by GregC

http://dateline.radioamerica.org/podcast/5-25-brat-blog.mp3

President Trump’s budget proposal for the coming fiscal year is coming under fierce criticism from Democrats and the media but a House Budget Committee member who spent 20 years as a college economics professor is impressed by Trump’s goals while warning that the president will need to address entitlement spending at some point.

The Trump administration released it’s $4 trillion budget proposal while Trump himself was overseas.  It calls for robust increases in national security spending while calling for considerable cuts to various government departments.  Democrats have labeled the budget as cruel and likely to cause children to die.  Republicans warn the final appropriations bills probably won’t look much like the Trump plan.

Rep. Dave Brat, R-Virginia, spent 20 years as an economics professor at Randolph Macon College.  He believes Trump is generally on the right track.

“Overall, I’m impressed,  It’s got the big pieces in the right place,” said Brat.  “The major piece I like is the policy aimed at getting three percent growth.  That will solve a lot of problems going forward,” said Brat, while praising the policies Trump is clearly emphasizing in the budget.

“It pluses up the military.  It tries to clean out the swamp.  It reduces some bureaucracy.  It balances in 10 years.  All of these are good conservative policies,” said Brat.

Brat says the Trump plan is a great improvement over what the Democrats are proposing.  In fact, he says they have no solutions at all.

“As a visionary document, we’re moving in the right direction.  Across the aisle on the Democrat side, they haven’t even ever put forward a budget that balances, not even in a 75-year window,” said Brat.

Brat and other Republicans admit getting what they want in the appropriations process won’t be easy since Senate rules require at least eight Democrats to approve any spending bills.  But while Democrats can gum up the process, Brat is acutely aware that voters will not accept failure when it comes to fiscal discipline.

“We should compromise but we shouldn’t give away the store.  In my view, the other side has given away the store too often.  On our side, we need to clean up some of this, rearrange the (entitlement) programs so the kids get sustained benefits over their lifetimes.  We’ve got to get the economy moving and some of that requires discipline,” said Brat.

“So our side gets hit hard but we need to step up to the plate and take it.  That’s our job and the American people expect us to get it straight,” said Brat.

But what about Democrats alleging children will die as a result of the Trump budget?  That allegation was especially targeted towards a proposed $800 billion in Medicaid cuts.  Brat says that’s dishonest reporting of the facts.

“The Democrats call them cuts.  They’re cuts from the baseline.  Medicaid still keeps increasing.  It just doesn’t increase at the pace it was going at, and that pace is bankrupting the country,” said Brat.  “Lot of politics going on right now but not much substance offered by the other side.  They’re great at hurling the insults but they’re short on the economic studies,” said Brat.

He also says White House Budget Director Mick Mulvaney made it very clear how he want about finding places to cut in the Fiscal 2018 budget.

“He said, ‘Look, there’s no mystery.  It’s just like running a business.  You look at each of these programs one by one by one and you compare the benefits against the cost.’  He made it very clear the safety net is not in question,” said Brat.

Brat says Democrats and Republicans need to realize that calling for a trillion dollars in cuts is just the tip of the iceberg.

“Some on the left are giving us a hard time over trying to save a trillion dollars or so, but even if we save one trillion that leaves you with another hundred trillion dollar shortfall with Medicare, Social Security, Medicaid, etc,” said Brat, who says failure to address the key entitlements will make 10-year spending cuts seem like loose change.

“Either you reform them and update them or else the kids get nothing.  The left is acting like ‘draconian’ cuts are going to hurt people.  Those cuts are nothing in comparison to the mandatory piece,” said Brat.

He says the clock is ticking loudly and time is short before entitlements engulf the entire budget.

“Those mandatory programs will account for 100 percent of all federal revenues in about 15 years.  That’s not a typo.  All federal revenues will be spent only on the mandatory.  That means there’s no money for the military, transportation, running government,” said Brat.

With that kind of looming fiscal crisis, Brat says the only path forward is to get every able-bodied adult into the workforce, and that’s where tax reform and tax cuts come in.  He says the demonizing of so-called supply side economics is bizarre.

“That term is used as a pejorative right now in D.C., supply-side tax cuts.  I taught economics for 20 years.  The demand side is all the people out there called consumers.  The supply side is also everybody out there that works for a living in business.  That’s the supply side,” said Brat.

He says it’s time for Washington to embrace the supply side again, since pumping up the demand side was a major flop.

“We’ve tried demand side stuff.  We’ve had bailouts, etc. that pumped money back into people’s pockets.  It gives you an instantaneous jolt, but if you’re serious about getting the economy growing you better incentivize business.  Trump probably won the election on that,” said Brat.

Brat believes doing tax cuts and tax reform right will set the stage for economic growth, which is the best hope for avoiding fiscal disaster in the near future.  He says tax cuts give businesses reason to hire, thereby beefing up the labor participation rate and bringing in more federal revenues through taxes.

“If we solve that one it’s huge,” said Brat.  “I think a lot of the worries go away if we get this economy rolling again.”

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Filed Under: News & Politics, Podcasts Tagged With: appropriations, Brat, budget, cuts, democrats, Medicaid, news, spending, taxes, Trump

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