Democrats have only just taken over the majority in the House of Representatives on Jan. 3, yet a rift has already emerged within their ranks over rules that govern votes on government spending.
The old guard, led by new House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.), wants to change the rules to prevent the Trump administration from offsetting additional government spending with cuts. They also want to make it easier to raise taxes. The more far-left progressive wing of the Democrats wants to further relax rules to make it easier to pass several large redistribution schemes they propose.
Shortly after Pelosi’s Deputy Chief of Staff, Drew Hammill, retorted in a Twitter post saying the rules must be passed to preempt the administration from cutting Democrat spending hikes.
CUTGO Versus PAYGO Rules
Republicans set up the old rules called CUTGO back in 2011 that require any increase in federal spending to be offset with spending cuts.The new rules called PAYGO were actually previously put in place by Democrats in 2007, allow for offsetting new spending with tax hikes too.
Way to Evade the Rules
The rules can be waived with a simple majority vote or through designating a bill as “emergency” one.The CBO tried to account for tax cuts boosting the economy in its predictions, but such calculations are notoriously shaky, given the organic complexities of economic development. Trump has criticized the predictions for being too pessimistic.
Massive Debt Balloons
There appears to be little chance to effectively rein in the nearly $22 trillion in public debt without reducing spending. Most federal spending is tied up in Medicare, Social Security, Medicaid, and other such programs.More Government
Democrats, and the progressives, in particular, have the opposite idea. The promise of “Medicare for all” pushed by Ocasio-Cortez and other birds of a feather would cost $32.6 trillion over 10 years, according to a study commissioned by the Mercatus Center at George Mason University. One author of the study accused Ocasio-Cortez and Sanders of misinterpreting the study’s results after saying the plan would actually save money.“As head of the agency that serves over 58 million Medicare beneficiaries, I deal first-hand with the challenges of government-run health care,” she said in a Nov. 2 blog post. “The answer to the skyrocketing cost curve is not greater government intervention, leading to the evisceration of the private insurance marketplace but just the opposite: increase choices, unleash private competition, innovation, and lighten regulations on plans, doctors and providers.”
However, the progressives appear to have gained concessions for their plans in the rules package. If a budget appropriations bill, for instance, exceeds spending caps, the House would no longer need to hold a separate vote to increase deficit limits.
The rules also drop the requirement on CBO to estimate the impact of legislation on the economy and future government revenues. An economy-killing bill would thus seem more benign on paper, while economy-stimulating bill could look more expensive.