June 22, 2010 1:31 PM

Hoyer: No Budget Resolution This Year because of Deficit Concerns

By
Stephanie Condon
Topics
Domestic Issues ,
Congress
Steny Hoyer (Credit: AP)

WASHINGTON -- Congress will not pass a budget resolution this year because the issue of the soaring national debt hangs over every policy debate in Washington, House Majority Steny Hoyer said today, and it will be impossible to pass a realistic long-term budget until the nation's structural deficit is addressed.

"Our problem is structural--the product of a generation's worth of easy decisions," Hoyer said at a discussion about the national deficit, hosted by the Third Way, a left-leaning, moderate think tank.

Hoyer said today that instead of passing a budget resolution, the House is working to adopt a budget enforcement resolution, which will call for even more spending cuts than the president's budget. It will also, he said, reaffirm Congress' commitment to PAYGO rules and endorse the goals of President Obama's bipartisan deficit commission, an 18-member panel charged with creating a plan to bring down the deficit to 3 percent of the economy by 2015.

"It isn't possible to debate and pass a realistic, long-term budget until we've considered the bipartisan commission's deficit-reduction plan, which is expected in December," Hoyer said. "I believe that Congress must take up and vote on that plan."

A traditional budget, by contrast, would also lay out the majority party's fiscal policy for years to come.

"This budget enforcement resolution will enforce fiscal discipline in the near term while the fiscal commission works on a long-term plan to get our country back to fiscal health," Hoyer said.

House Republican leadership pounced on Hoyer's announcement that a budget will not be passed, pointing out that Hoyer once called enacting a budget "the most basic responsibility of governing." The GOP critique came in the form of a mock cancellation notice, which read: "We regret to inform you that the congressional budget planned for fiscal year 2011 has been cancelled due to Washington Democrats' out-of-control spending spree."

The Democratic leader said correcting the longterm structural deficit means both tax increases and spending cuts on programs like Social Security.

"To share sacrifices fairly, and to be politically viable, the commission's proposal can only have one form: an agreement that cuts spending and raises revenue," Hoyer said. "We're lying to ourselves and our children if we say we can maintain our current levels of entitlement spending defense spending, and taxation without bankrupting our country."


Add a Comment See all 22 Comments
by giatn June 30, 2010 7:26 PM EDT
If you don't write it down, the deficit doesn't exist??
Anyone who allows these duplicitous fools to control
spending again, are brain dead.
Reply to this comment
by LeftCoastInsurgent June 23, 2010 11:49 PM EDT
So Congress is going to abdicate yet another Constitutional power to the executive branch and simply endorse the findings of the budget reduction committee rather than do its job.

This helps the Democrats in two ways at the ballot box. This allows them to appear concerned with the deficit; the attention span of the average American sheeple meaning they won't remember that all the Democrats have done since they took Congress in '06 is spend like drunken sailors.

It also means that we won't be able to look at their contributions to and votes on the budget-that-will-never-be once it comes time to cast our votes in November. No budget = no responsibility for that budget.

Normally when no budget is passed it's because of some crisis. This seems to be purely about political expediency.
Reply to this comment
by janisk57 June 23, 2010 12:15 AM EDT
The real reason that they won't try to pass a budget is that they obviously have no idea how to create one! Their great leaders, Obama and Pelosi, are under the mistaken impression that government can spend on anything and everywhere and the money will magically appear!
Reply to this comment
by jgg000101 June 22, 2010 7:13 PM EDT
geez, cbs, you bury this story any deeper? Hoyer also said we've "lost the war in afghanistan". Is that not newsworthy?
Reply to this comment
by jgg000101 June 22, 2010 7:16 PM EDT
actually, also said there would be middle class tax increases. I guess that isn't newsworthy, either.
by djaymick June 22, 2010 5:45 PM EDT
As John Spratt, Jr. (D-SC) put it, "If you can't budget, you can't govern." I wonder if he will challenge Hoyer's comments or be labeled a hypocrite?
Reply to this comment
by djaymick June 22, 2010 5:37 PM EDT
Basically Hoyer is saying that he will abandon the law and create a new way of doing business. I say we shut down the federal government if the budget's not in place by the end of September.

Leaders lead by example. This Administration has failed to do so. As Americans are being affected by this recession, they are forced to reexamine their budgets to make ends meet. Even the President has addressed this by saying, "Americans are tightening their belts." However, the pigs at the trough in Congress continue to eat and let their pants pop open to eat some more. WE NEED LEADERS!
Reply to this comment
by LifeLibertyHappiness June 22, 2010 4:14 PM EDT
Right- we should definitely raise taxes & cut social security while we keep funding the terrorists millions of tax dollars a week. http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/world/us_and_canada/10372309.stm
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by ConcernedCitizen13 June 22, 2010 3:52 PM EDT
So let me see if I have this right... The Democrats are proposing to put together a panel, with the objective to only OVERSPEND by 21% of what they earn by 5 years from now? Which also means they plan to do nothing to pay back the national debt?

How stupid are these clowns?

(3% of GDP = 21% tax revenue)
Reply to this comment
by IndepTex22 June 22, 2010 3:46 PM EDT
by thinkOnIt June 22, 2010 2:56 PM EDT
.......... Just wait for the REAL Obama Care cost to start hitting us.

I would rather see the November elections give us real change and then have the conservative majority hand his healthcare bill back to him in pieces!

Come on November!!
Reply to this comment
by Keith1157 June 22, 2010 3:07 PM EDT
Let see 257 Democrats in the House, 60 Democrats in the Senate, one Democrat in the White House, 1.6 Trillion dollar deficit spending and finally they ran out of money and there is no budget agreement? Suddenly it is the Republicans fault for the debt? As they say on AOL LMAO
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