Bush's Balanced Balance Bid: Heavy Lifting or Laughing?

While we await his State of the Union speech and the Bush budget for FY2008, the media focus remains fixed, oddly, on the President's pledge last week that, despite his profligate past, he will balance the federal budget by 2012. As we and others have suggested, this pledge shouldn't be taken seriously. A Washington Post article today on the topic asserts that "the politically perilous work of making that happen -- cutting spending or raising taxes -- falls to the Democratic-run Congress."

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Senators Broach Fiscal and Entitlement Reform Initiative

We last left the subject of budget and entitlement reform in 2006 (here and here) amid muted congressional response to bids by OMB Director Rob Portman and Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson to discuss concrete solutions.

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Is the Sky Falling?

GAO Chief David M. Walker plays budget Cassandra in a report to the Senate Budget Committee today. You can read the report here

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Baucus Nearing Completion on "Trifecta Lite"

Senator Max Baucus (D-MT) is putting the finishing touches on a minimum wage bill that also cuts taxes for small businesses. Even though the House overwhelmingly passed a clean minimum wage bill, Baucus says the $10 billion in proposed tax breaks are needed to offset the hardship a higher minimum wage might impose on small businesses

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House Passes Long-Overdue Minimum Wage Raise

Alright! By a wide margin (312 to 116), the House just passed a raise in the minimum wage. No Democrats voted against it, and 82 Republicans voted for it, even though it had no other "sweetening" provisions, such as tax breaks for businesses. The ball is now in the Senate's court.

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Sen. Baucus Taken to Task in Washington Post

Steven Pearlstein, the business columnists for the Washington Post, has a blistering expose on Sen. Finance Committee Chairman Max Baucus (D-MT) in today's paper. Pearlstein wonders how (or perhaps why?) Sen. Baucus was able to work his way to the top of the Democrats' list to lead the Finance Committee when many if not all of his views on committee business are essentially contrary to the Democratic Party platform. A few excerpts:

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WaPo's Samuelson Needlessly Freaks Out About Social Security

Robert Samuelson bashes his generation in today’s Washington Post: Shame on us [baby boomers]. We are trying to rob our children and grandchildren, putting the country's future at risk in the process. On one of the great issues of our time, the social and economic costs of our retirement, we have adopted a policy of selfish silence. *Sigh* What is Samuelson so exercised about? He’s huffing and puffing over something that may or may not happen 33 years from now.

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Collender: WH Balanced Budget Bid a PR Ploy

We commend to readers today's National Journal article by Stan Collender entitled "Budget Debate Gets Off to a Bad Start," which succintly reprises the charade involved in President Bush's pledge last week to balance the federal budget by 2012. It is reproduced in full below: The FY08 debate got off to the worst possible start last week when President Bush announced he was going to balance the budget by 2012. Pledging to balance the federal budget in five years is a tried-and-true White House public relations ploy. That is the case here as well: The short-term deficit likely will be rising, with the FY07 and FY08 deficits higher than what occurred in FY06.

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CBO Reports Lower Deficit

CBO has released the budget numbers for the first quarter of fiscal year 2007. The deficit was $85 billion, $35 billion less than the first quarter of last fiscal year. Temporary events, not structural factors, mostly explain the difference between this year and last. Hurricane Katrina drove up federal spending last year, and record corporate profits and big gains for high-earners have been pushing up revenues this year, though most analysts expect that surge to end soon. House Budget Chairman Rep. John Spratt (D-SC) commented on the news in CQ ($).

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Stating The Obvious

Today, the NYT reminds us that the tax cuts of 2001 and 2003 disproportionately benefited the wealthy over the middle class, the super wealthy over the wealthy, and the wealthy-beyond-your-imagination over the super wealthy.

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