>Balanced Budget Amendment is the Key to Addressing our Fiscal Crisis
Just last week, House Republicans put forth an honest solution to address our nation’s debt crisis by passing the Cut, Cap and Balance Act with bipartisan support. This was a straightforward, common-sense approach that satisfied the president’s request to raise the debt ceiling while tackling our country’s addiction to debt by reining in Washington’s out of control spending.
The bill would immediately cut the deficit by $111 billion in 2012, institute enforceable caps on spending as a percentage of gross domestic product (GDP) over the next ten years, and require a balanced budget amendment to the Constitution to avoid ever having to face this problem again. Unfortunately, Senate Democrats tabled the bill, essentially killing the bipartisan effort of the House without so much as debating, much less voting, on the measure.
So here we are, just four days out from President Obama’s August 2nd deadline and we still have not seen action from Democrats in the Senate to address our debt crisis. Furthermore, in the case of President Obama, we haven’t even been told what his plan is to raise the debt ceiling. Understanding the urgency of forging a solution that can pass both chambers of Congress, House Republicans stepped up to the plate again today by putting forth yet another proposal to raise the debt ceiling—the Budget Control Act of 2011.
As Speaker Boehner will readily admit, the bill brought to the House floor today is far from perfect. It is not the ideal solution that I or many of my Republican colleagues would like to see come out of this process, but it does satisfy the president’s request to raise the debt ceiling while upholding our commitment to equal-or-greater spending cuts and enacting a balanced budget amendment. Since Senate Democrats and the Obama administration have drawn a hard line and opposed every good-faith effort by Republicans to reach a compromise, it is my sincere hope that they finally meet us halfway by getting on board with this sensible solution to resolving our country’s debt crisis.
President Obama continues to publicly oppose this bill, arguing that the two-step process in which the debt ceiling will be raised would force us to have to revisit this debate again six months from now. The President has also expressed opposition to a balanced budget amendment, naively claiming that “we don’t need a constitutional amendment to do our jobs.”
What remains a mystery to me, is why the president, who seems so intent on avoiding this issue in the future, opposes the very thing that will prevent us from ever facing this crisis again. A balanced budget amendment to the Constitution, by its very design, is the only mechanism that will prevent us from having to address this issue again in the future. Should we not choose this path to budgetary reform, not only will we be saddled with another crisis down the road, but the severity of the situation at that point will be far worse and require even tougher sacrifices.
This is a moment of profound importance for the future of our country. We have an opportunity to reverse a 50-year trend towards out of control spending and unfunded entitlements that threaten to destroy our country from the inside out. Just this week, The Wall Street Journal published an editorial explaining the crushing burden our entitlement programs have on our federal budget process. According to The Wall Street Journal, “The looming debt downgrade only confirms what everyone knows: Congress has made so many promises to so many Americans that there is no conceivable way those promises can be kept. Tax rates might have to rise to 60%, 70%, even 80% to raise the revenues to finance these promises, but that would be economically ruinous.”
If we do nothing, if we sit back and let this cancer grow, we risk becoming the next Greece. Speaker Boehner’s Budget Control Act of 2011 is not perfect, but it does take that bold first step in the right direction. It sets the stage for this Congress to make real structural reforms to give our children and our grandchildren hope that they, too, will grow up in a land of opportunity with the freedom to pursue their own American dream.
Sincerely,
Scott Garrett