President Obama is setting a trap for John Boehner
and Mitch McConnell by threatening to veto defense spending for the
entire year unless Republicans back off of their budget cuts.
The veto threat came in a statement of administration policy:
Enacting H.R. 2685 and adhering to the
congressional Republican budget’s overall spending limits for FY 2016
would hurt our economy and shortchange investments in middle-class
priorities. Sequestration was never intended to take effect: rather,
it was supposed to threaten such drastic cuts to both defense and
non-defense funding that policymakers would be motivated to come to the
table and reduce the deficit through smart, balanced reforms. The
Republican framework would bring base discretionary funding for both
non-defense and defense for FY 2016 to the lowest real levels in a
decade. Compared to the President’s Budget, the cuts would result in
tens of thousands of the Nation’s most vulnerable children losing access
to Head Start, more than two million fewer workers receiving job
training and employment services, and thousands fewer scientific and
medical research awards and grants, along with other impacts that would
hurt the economy, the middle class, and Americans working hard to reach
the middle class.
Sequestration funding levels would also put our
national security at unnecessary risk, not only through pressures on
defense spending, but also through pressures on State, USAID, Homeland
Security, and other non-defense programs that help keep us safe. More
broadly, the strength of our economy and the security of our Nation are
linked. That is why the President has been clear that he is not willing
to lock in sequestration going forward, nor will he accept fixes to
defense without also fixing non-defense.
The President’s senior advisors would
recommend that he veto H.R. 2685 and any other legislation that
implements the current Republican budget framework, which blocks the
investments needed for our economy to compete in the future. The
Administration looks forward to working with the Congress to reverse
sequestration for defense and non-defense priorities and offset the cost
with commonsense spending and tax expenditure cuts, as Members of
Congress from both parties have urged.
The White House’s veto threat came shortly after Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell rejected demands from Democratic Senate leaders for
a budget summit. Democrats have already warned Republicans that they
will block the Senate from taking up the bill unless they agree to lift
the sequester cuts. Republicans provoked this fight by using a gimmick
to get around the defense sequester cuts. The Republican budget upped
the funding the account used to pay for the wars in Iraq and
Afghanistan. By going off the books, Republicans violated the sequester
cuts by shifting spending to the war fund.
Republicans are cutting spending for programs that
benefit children and seniors to pay their favorite form of pork and red
state welfare.
President
Obama and Congressional Democrats are setting Boehner and McConnell up.
The Republican leaders will have to choose between not funding the
military or keeping the sequester cuts. This could all be resolved if
Republicans treated every appropriations bill the same way that they
treated defense spending. Boehner and McConnell are trying to have their
cake and eat it too, but the President and Democrats are standing tall,
and they are about to make life miserable for John Boehner and Mitch
McConnell.
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