Democrats Can Win the Budget Debate
Point out Republican gimmicks and unfair impacts
What Obama began to do this week is what Democrats ought to have been doing forcefully for many weeks, which is to ensure that Americans understand the central differences between Democratic and Republican budgeting—and how the party's contrasting programs would affect them and their families. While acknowledging the need to bring the federal budget closer to balance in coming years, the president laid down real markers concerning how that objective should and should not be achieved.
It should not be done, he said, by raising the costs of medical care beyond affordability for most of the nation's elderly, as the Republican assault on Medicare would eventually do. It should not be done by slashing programs that assist the nation's poor and vulnerable. And it cannot be done at the expense of future generations, by vandalizing the nation's infrastructure through neglect or depriving the nation's children of educational opportunity.
It must be done instead, said the president, in ways that reflect American traditions of fairness (in contrast to the disdain shown by today's GOP, these traditions were once honored by the leaders of the Republican Party). It must demand the most from those who have benefited most, rather than treating them to still more tax cuts. It must restore the standards that have made America the leader of the world in education, research and public investment since the Second World War, rather than accelerating our decline.
A Balancing Act
As expected, Obama the politician sought to position
himself as close to the center (and independent voters) as he could, by
reminding Democrats and progressives that the rapidly rising cost of health
care is unsustainable—and that the concept of "shared sacrifice"
doesn't exempt anyone's priorities, including his and theirs. As usual, he gave
away too much before the negotiating process had even started.
Yet the president and his political advisers clearly
feel that they must establish credibility as budget balancers if they are to
prevail. Bill Clinton began his presidency by confronting the Republican legacy
of deficits with higher taxes and lower expenditures, but Obama had no
realistic choice other than to increase spending substantially—or let the
country and the world sink into depression. Now, from the president's point of
view, he is bargaining from a weakened position and has no choice but to
emphasize cutbacks over revenue.
Polls still show, however, that the public agrees
with Obama on the most important issues, from preserving Medicare and Social
Security entitlements to raising taxes on the wealthy to investing in
education, the environment and infrastructure. Very few outside the most
dogmatic precincts of the Republican Party believe that the richest of the rich
need additional tax cuts, or that such cuts should take priority over food
stamps and Medicaid.
Is that an "excessively partisan" or
"dramatically inaccurate" way to describe the Republican fiscal
philosophy, as House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan complained so bitterly
in his rejoinder to Obama's speech? Is the president's plan "hopelessly
inadequate," as Ryan said, when compared with his own ever-changing,
wildly phony "path to prosperity"?
Ryan's angry response has opened up the possibility
of a debate that the country desperately needs. Let us hope that Obama doesn't
shrink from that challenge or delegate it to someone else. If his presidency is
to become anything but the prelude to an era of decline, he must keep pushing
forward just as aggressively as the Republicans push backward.
© 2011 Creators.com



Mindy Portmann
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