White House At Odds With House on Weapons Cancellations

It's an old battle: executive branch expertise on how it thinks taxpayer dollars should be spent versus the congressional power of the purse. This story plays out often in the yearly authorization and appropriations bills for the Department of Defense (DOD). This year is not any different as a White House statement from yesterday makes clear.

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Boehner Seeks Additional Spending Cuts in Return for Debt Increase

In a June 11 interview, House Speaker John Boehner (R-OH) said that any further increase in the federal debt limit should be accompanied by additional spending cuts, according to Roll Call.

“I believe that if we’re going to increase the debt limit, there ought to be cuts and reforms in place that are greater than the increase in the debt limit,” Speaker Boehner said.

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Debt Limit to be Reached in October or November

The federal government will not reach its statutorily-set debt limit of $16.7 trillion until October or November, according a report released June 11 by the Congressional Budget Office.

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The House Armed Services Committee Proposes Weakening Contractor Compensation Cap

The House committee in charge of overseeing the Department of Defense and drafting the National Defense Authorization Act has answered the White House’s call to address the ever-increasing contractor compensation cap. But the House Armed Services Committee is serving up something far weaker than what the White House wants and a substantial reversal from the status quo. Namely it would exempt a large universe of contractors that are subject to the cap currently.

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Does Growth on Wall Street Slow Growth Everywhere Else?

Bruce Bartlett, a former senior official in the Reagan and George H.W. Bush administrations, has an interesting new column at The New York Times that concludes that the growing "financialization" of our economy has resulted in increased income inequality and slower economic growth.

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Dissent: The Case for Higher Taxes (in Graphics)

Colin Gordon, a professor of history at the University of Iowa, has written an interesting (and interactive) article for Dissent that shows historic trends in taxes in the United States.

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Report: Sequestration Cuts Affecting States

Broad cuts to federal funding, known as sequestration, will eliminate $5.1 billion in federal assistance to states this year, according to a report by the Economic Policy Institute.

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Administration, Congress Still Searching for Elusive 'Grand Bargain'

Although declining budget deficits would appear to have undercut pressure for another grand bargain on deficit reduction, administration officials are continuing to meet with Congress in search of an agreement.

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Now Is Not the Time for a 'Grand Bargain'

The Washington Post took time this weekend to reprimand progressives who think continued budgetary austerity when the economy is still recovering is ill-advised.

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More than a Half Million Sign Petition Against Tax Havens

More than 590,000 individuals have signed a petition to G8 leaders calling on them to address tax havens and tax avoidance. The signatories are asking international leaders to “agree and implement tough, binding measures to combat tax evasion” at the G8 Summit to be held in Northern Ireland starting on June 17.

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