Balanced budget amendment fails in House vote
A measure proposed by Sixth District Congressman Bob Goodlatte that would set into motion a process to amend the United States Constitution to require that Congress pass a balanced budget fell short today of the two-thirds majority needed for passage.
“It is a simple concept – you can’t spend more than you take in,” Goodlatte said in a statement after the vote. “Business owners, individuals and families all across this country understand this concept and live by it in their own lives. They should expect nothing less from the federal government, and yet Congress continues to prove it cannot make the tough decisions on its own. We must rein in the skyrocketing deficit spending that is discouraging investment and threatening to bankrupt our nation.”
The final vote was 261 in favor of the amendment and 165 opposed.
The measure failed in large part due to Democrats voting against it in large numbers.
A similar measure introduced by Goodlatte in 1995 passed the House and fell one vote short of passage in the Senate.
“I remain committed to passing a balanced budget amendment,” Goodllate said. “I appreciate the strong support H.J. Res 2 received from dozens of Democrats, and I look forward to working with them in the future to build even more support for this much-needed institutional reform. It is the only way to ensure that Congress curtails its spending on an annual basis regardless of which party is in control.”
Andy Schmookler: Goodlatte’s balanced-budget amendment folly
Congressman Bob Goodlatte trumpets his Balanced Budget Amendment as his big idea. It’s a bad idea, offered in bad faith.
Rep. Goodlatte’s rules would mean inevitable cuts to Social Security and Medicare –programs seniors rely upon for security and dignity. The funds that have been built up over years in the Social Security Trust Fund, to provide for the retirement of baby boomers would become inaccessible to the program, according to organizations of retired workers and the Center for Budget and Policy Priorities.
Goodlatte’s amendment would effectively lock in levels of taxation that shifted the tax burden from the superrich and the corporations onto the backs of middle class families.
His amendment would lead to cuts in programs that benefit average Americans, and lead to increases in taxes at state and local levels.
But isn’t that worth it, if that’s required for Fiscal Responsibility?
No. Not every strategy of financial discipline is smart. President Herbert Hoover’s form of fiscal discipline made the Great Depression worse. Goodlatte’s amendment would take us down the same sorry path.
Modern economics tells us that the smart way for the federal government to be fiscally responsible is to lean against the business cycle — against the ups and downs of boom and bust. That means running a surplus during boom years, and running deficits during bust years, as illustrated by a story from the Bible.
In the Bible’s book of Genesis, Pharaoh asks Joseph to interpret two puzzling dreams. In one, seven fat cattle are consumed by seven lean cattle; in the other, full grains are devoured by withered grains.
Joseph interprets the dreams as warning that Egypt will have seven years of bountiful crops, followed by seven years of drought and failed crops. Pharaoh should prepare, Joseph says, by taking a portion of the harvests during the fat years to fill the granaries. Then, during the years when famine is a danger, granaries can be emptied to feed the people.
That’s also wise fiscal policy. During the fat years of robust economic growth, government should tax more and spend less, filling the Treasury and keeping the economy from over-heating. But during lean years – like those we are in now— government should spend more than it takes in so the economy will not starve.
Contrary to what Rep. Goodlatte and other Republicans say, the government should behave the opposite of everyone else. It should save while everyone else lives high. And when bad times lead everyone else to hunker down, sitting on their money, the government should spend. That breaks the vicious cycle of people losing jobs because no one is buying much of anything, which leads to people buying still less.
The problem is not that America is running deficits NOW. The REAL problem is that in the years of economic growth before the financial crisis, when we should have been running surpluses, the Republicans almost DOUBLED the national debt.
The Bush administration inherited budget surpluses from the Democrats, and then, with Vice President Cheney saying “Deficits don’t matter,” these Republicans waged two wars OFF THE BOOKS and instituted an expensive prescription drug benefit without funding it.
Rep. Goodlatte gave his full support to all that. And he supported massive tax cuts for the rich when we should have been filling the granaries to provide for harder times in the future.
Rep. Goodlatte’s pet amendment is not just bad economics but bad faith as well.
If he really cared about closing the deficit, would he insist that revenues, which are at historic lows, play NO ROLE in closing the deficit? Would he be so adamant that those at the very top, whose share of the national wealth has tripled in recent years and whose tax burden has been decreasing, should pay not a cent in additional taxes? Would he have voted for the Ryan budget this year that would shift the cost of health care onto senior citizens in order to fund yet another tax cut for multi-millionaires and billionaires?
Under a false banner of “fiscal responsibility,” Rep. Goodlatte and his fellow Republicans seek to dismantle those aspects of government that serve average Americans.
We don’t need the CRIPPLED government that Rep. Goodlatte’s amendment would give us. We need government that works again FOR THE PEOPLE so that we can achieve together what we cannot accomplish as separate individuals– like preventing the cycle of boom and bust from devastating American lives.
That’s the kind of “more perfect union” our founders had in mind.
Andy Schmookler is a candidate for the Democratic Party nomination to run for the Sixth District congressional seat. More on his campaign online at www.AndySchmooklerForCongress.com.
McDonnell backs local delegate on balanced-budget amendment
A resolution proposed by Rockbridge Republican Del. Ben Cline that calls on Congress to pass an amendment to the United States Constitution requiring it to adopt a balanced budget has the support of Gov. Bob McDonnell.
“Over the last two years, the federal government has added approximately $3.37 trillion to the national debt, making the total national debt an unsustainable $14 trillion. It is critical that Washington gets its fiscal house in order and reduces spending to ensure the future prosperity and security of our great nation,” McDonnell said in a statement on the resolution, which also calls for a constitutional convention for adoption of a balanced-budget amendment.
McDonnell has been under fire of late from Democrats and the Tea Party for his $4 billion transportation-improvements plan that relies heavily on the assumption of public debt for financing. Cline voted against the McDonnell plan in the House earlier this week, though it passed with largely Republican support by a 65-33 vote.
“Families must make tough decisions every day to balance their checkbooks, and states like Virginia have balanced budgets every year — the federal government should be no different,” Cline said. “The resolution I am introducing today requesting a constitutional convention on a balanced budget amendment is a step in the right direction toward reining in federal government spending and tackling the federal debt. A balanced budget amendment in the U.S. Constitution will set us on a path toward fiscal responsibility in Washington.”
Story by Chris Graham. Chris can be reached at freepress2@ntelos.net.
Bob Goodlatte: Balancing the federal budget
Column by Bob Goodlatte
www.house.gov/goodlatte
It is no secret that the American people are facing a very tough economic climate. Families and small businesses are cutting back on expenses. As economic uncertainty continues, many across our nation are looking to the government for leadership during this difficult time. Continue reading “Bob Goodlatte: Balancing the federal budget” »
















