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US House Republicans try to beat Biden to punch on 2025 budget proposal

Published 03/07/2024, 06:55 PM
Updated 03/07/2024, 08:15 PM
© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: U.S. Speaker of the House Mike Johnson (R-LA) walks towards microphones to make a statement to members of the news media after meeting with President Joe Biden, Vice President Kamala Harris, U.S. House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-NY), S

By David Morgan

WASHINGTON (Reuters) -As the U.S. Congress struggles to pass legislation to fund the government through the fiscal year that began in October, House Republicans on Thursday sought to jump the gun on Democratic President Joe Biden by unveiling a plan for the next year.

The plan aims to balance the federal budget within a decade, cutting $14 trillion in federal spending in such areas as green energy subsides and student loan forgiveness while reducing taxes. It was approved in committee hours before Biden was to give the State of the Union Address and days before he was to unveil his own budget proposal on Monday.

"House Republicans have been long sounding the alarm on the fiscal challenges facing our nation and this budget plan takes steps to put the nation on the track to fiscal sanity," House Speaker Mike Johnson said in a statement after the House Budget Committee adopted the blueprint in a 19-15 party line vote.

The White House bashed the plan.

"The day President Biden delivers his State of the Union address - where he’ll discuss how he’s fighting to lower costs for middle class families and make the wealthy pay their fair share - congressional Republicans released a budget that sells out those hardworking Americans to rich special interests," a White House spokesperson said.

Johnson has struggled to pass legislation with his narrow House Republican majority and the Democratic-led Senate has repeatedly rejected demands of hardline Republicans. The House had to suspend its normal rules on Wednesday to pass a stopgap funding bill to avert a government shutdown, with substantial Democratic support.

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Budget committee chairman Jodey Arrington said the budget plan would reduce the federal debt, which stands at over $34 trillion, create a $44 billion budget surplus in fiscal 2034 and stir economic growth by lowering taxes.

Democrats poured scorn on the blueprint, warning that it would punish American families and pointing to Biden's budget, which is due to be released on Monday, as the true path to sanity.

"Today, we saw just how backward and extreme House Republicans' vision for the future really is," said Representative Brendan Boyle, the panel's top Democrat.

The new Republican 2025 budget contains the same $1.6 trillion in base discretionary spending laid out in the Fiscal Responsibility Act, which Biden agreed to last year with former House Speaker Kevin McCarthy. Spending for fiscal 2024 totals $1.66 trillion.

The budget postpones severe spending cuts until fiscal 2026, after the November election that will determine control of the White House and Congress.

Committee documents show 2026 basic discretionary spending falling by more than $100 billion to $1.5 trillion.

Arrington said the budget would cut just over $14 trillion in spending over the next decade. It would eliminate programs long targeted by Republicans: Biden's student loan bailout, green energy subsidies and expanded funding for the Internal Revenue Service.

Latest comments

It's mind numbing that Republicans cannot think beyond lowering taxes even when tax rates are already at historical lows. Given the full extent of subsidies, it is gratuitous to lower taxes without bringing corporate handouts and bailouts, tax exemptions, loopholes and tax credits to a close. Ya wanna a flat tax, there it is and why it won't happen.
The difference between tax rates and effective rate is that if tax rates are cut again, more corporations will have an effective rate of less than 10%. Defunding the IRS would also increase the national debt from lowered collections of taxes that are already at historical lows. The magnificent 7, that have monetized your every move, show up with legal teams to dispute the taxes their clients morally and legally owe. Billionaires have a plethora of loopholes and tax shelters to choose from. Save the tax cuts for when actually needed. Ditto for student loan bailouts. Metrics are showing that Generation Z will collectively earn more than previous generations.
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