House Republicans saw their budget dreams go up in
smoke as President Obama is already signaling that he will veto the
unpopular, but freshly passed House budget.
In a statement the White House said:
Budgets are about priorities. This evening the House Republicans made clear that once again their priority is to cut taxes for millionaires and billionaires and return our economy to the same top-down economics that has failed the American people before. House Republicans voted in favor of locking in draconian sequestration cuts to investments in the middle class like education, job training, and manufacturing. House Republicans also failed to responsibly fund our national security, opting instead for budget gimmicks.
Budgets are about priorities. This evening the House Republicans made clear that once again their priority is to cut taxes for millionaires and billionaires and return our economy to the same top-down economics that has failed the American people before. House Republicans voted in favor of locking in draconian sequestration cuts to investments in the middle class like education, job training, and manufacturing. House Republicans also failed to responsibly fund our national security, opting instead for budget gimmicks.
The Republican priorities stand in stark contrast to
the President’s plan to reverse sequestration and bring middle-class
economics into the 21st Century. Through critical investments needed to
accelerate and sustain economic growth in the long run, including in
research, education, training, and infrastructure, the President’s
Budget shows what we can do if we invest in America’s future and commit
to an economy that rewards hard work, generates rising incomes, and
allows everyone to share in the prosperity of a growing America.
The President has been clear that he will
not accept a budget that locks in sequestration or one that increases
funding for our national security without providing matching increases
in funding for our economic security. The Administration will continue
to abide by these principles moving forward.
The budget showdown between President Obama and
Congressional Republicans could be the most significant budget battle
since then President Bill Clinton vetoed the Republican budget in 1995.
At the time of his veto, Clinton said,
“With this veto, the extreme Republican effort to balance the budget
through wrongheaded cuts and misplaced priorities is over. Now it’s up
to all of us to go back to work together to show we can balance the
budget and be true to our values and our economic interests.”
Both President Clinton and President Obama mentioned
priorities for a reason. The budget is never about dollars. Budgets are
about ideology and priorities. The 2015 Republicans are repeating the
behavior of the 1995 Republicans. They are trying to use the budgetary
process to force their ideology on a Democratic president. The stage is
being set for an epic budget throwdown the likes of which the country
has seen in almost two decades.
President
Obama message to Speaker Boehner and Majority Leader McConnell is
clear. If the Republicans want a budget fight, they’ve got it.
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