so you thought republicans were serious about cutting spending? not so much.
lets use republican logic here. cutting spending for teachers and police is good and will stimulate growth but cutting military spending will cause grave economic problems:
âWhatâs more, cutting our militaryâeither by eliminating programs or laying off soldiersâbrings grave economic costs,â wrote Chairman Buck McKeon (R-CA) in a Wall Street Journal op-ed last week. âf the super committee fails to reach an agreement, its automatic cuts would kill upwards of 800,000 active-duty, civilian and industrial American jobs. This would inflate our unemployment rate by a full percentage point, close shipyards and assembly lines, and damage the industrial base that our warfighters need to stay fully supplied and equipped.â
âShould another $600 billion in cuts come to pass, at least 200,000 pink slips could be delivered to active-duty warfighters; at least 13 percent of our servicemembers will be forced out,â wrote Rep. Randy Forbes (R-VA) in Stars And Stripes last week. âAnother 200,000 job losses will come to Department of Defense civilians working at installations across the country. We would be asking 1 in 4 highly skilled defense civilians to leave service.â
Thereâs truth to that. But where have these guys been the last 10 months?
Since they took over the House of Representatives in January, the GOP has been on a single-minded pursuit of deep cuts to almost to all other federal programs. They fought for $100 billion in immediate cuts to so called non-defense discretionary programs â education, research, health care, and others that receive annual funding from Congress â and $2.4 trillion in further cuts over 10 years to both discretionary programs and programs like Medicare, that are funded automatically.
That was the GOP agenda, despite a crippled economy, and despite warnings from economists that cutting government spending during a time of weak consumer demand would make things worse and could even risk a second recession.
Over the last 10 months, the GOP has dismissed or denied those warnings, in a number of ways. In the early days of the 112th Congress, House Majority Leader Eric Cantor (R-VA) touted the Republicansâ vision of a âCut & Growâ economy â one that somehow produced new jobs as the result of a trimmed federal government.
During a February press conference House Speaker John Boehner (R-OH) acknowledged that GOP-pushed cuts would likely result in public sector job losses but, he said, âIf some of those jobs are lost so be it. Weâre broke.â
http://tpmdc.talkingpointsmemo.com/...le-on-spending-when-cuts-hit-home.php?ref=fpb
lets use republican logic here. cutting spending for teachers and police is good and will stimulate growth but cutting military spending will cause grave economic problems:
âWhatâs more, cutting our militaryâeither by eliminating programs or laying off soldiersâbrings grave economic costs,â wrote Chairman Buck McKeon (R-CA) in a Wall Street Journal op-ed last week. âf the super committee fails to reach an agreement, its automatic cuts would kill upwards of 800,000 active-duty, civilian and industrial American jobs. This would inflate our unemployment rate by a full percentage point, close shipyards and assembly lines, and damage the industrial base that our warfighters need to stay fully supplied and equipped.â
âShould another $600 billion in cuts come to pass, at least 200,000 pink slips could be delivered to active-duty warfighters; at least 13 percent of our servicemembers will be forced out,â wrote Rep. Randy Forbes (R-VA) in Stars And Stripes last week. âAnother 200,000 job losses will come to Department of Defense civilians working at installations across the country. We would be asking 1 in 4 highly skilled defense civilians to leave service.â
Thereâs truth to that. But where have these guys been the last 10 months?
Since they took over the House of Representatives in January, the GOP has been on a single-minded pursuit of deep cuts to almost to all other federal programs. They fought for $100 billion in immediate cuts to so called non-defense discretionary programs â education, research, health care, and others that receive annual funding from Congress â and $2.4 trillion in further cuts over 10 years to both discretionary programs and programs like Medicare, that are funded automatically.
That was the GOP agenda, despite a crippled economy, and despite warnings from economists that cutting government spending during a time of weak consumer demand would make things worse and could even risk a second recession.
Over the last 10 months, the GOP has dismissed or denied those warnings, in a number of ways. In the early days of the 112th Congress, House Majority Leader Eric Cantor (R-VA) touted the Republicansâ vision of a âCut & Growâ economy â one that somehow produced new jobs as the result of a trimmed federal government.
During a February press conference House Speaker John Boehner (R-OH) acknowledged that GOP-pushed cuts would likely result in public sector job losses but, he said, âIf some of those jobs are lost so be it. Weâre broke.â
http://tpmdc.talkingpointsmemo.com/...le-on-spending-when-cuts-hit-home.php?ref=fpb
.