You can’t cut spending without cutting spending
By Ezra Klein,
WashPost
Published: April 6 | Updated: Saturday, April 7, 8:00 AM
Joshua Roberts BLOOMBERG A House staffer hands out copies of the Republican 2012 budget proposal I’ve been pursuing something of a project on this blog in recent months. The project has been to convince you that budgets matter. That they’re not one-day stories or — even worse — dull documents that we have to pretend to care about before we get to the fun whirl of politics.
No, budgets are a moment when the two parties can’t hide. They’re a moment — one of the only moments — when politicians stop talking and put numbers down on a page. Numbers we can check and see and question. And so they should be read closely, and mined in great detail, because in those numbers -- in the tables in the back, and the assumptions fed to the Congressional Budget Office -- we can see the decisions the parties make when they’re forced to choose between competing priorities and constituencies. In those numbers, we can see, with unusal clarity, what the fights that animate American politics are ultimately about.
But the numbers don’t matter if we don’t force them off the page and into the world voters actually inhabit. Which brings us to David Brooks’s Friday column:
WashPost
Published: April 6 | Updated: Saturday, April 7, 8:00 AM
Joshua Roberts BLOOMBERG A House staffer hands out copies of the Republican 2012 budget proposal I’ve been pursuing something of a project on this blog in recent months. The project has been to convince you that budgets matter. That they’re not one-day stories or — even worse — dull documents that we have to pretend to care about before we get to the fun whirl of politics.
No, budgets are a moment when the two parties can’t hide. They’re a moment — one of the only moments — when politicians stop talking and put numbers down on a page. Numbers we can check and see and question. And so they should be read closely, and mined in great detail, because in those numbers -- in the tables in the back, and the assumptions fed to the Congressional Budget Office -- we can see the decisions the parties make when they’re forced to choose between competing priorities and constituencies. In those numbers, we can see, with unusal clarity, what the fights that animate American politics are ultimately about.
But the numbers don’t matter if we don’t force them off the page and into the world voters actually inhabit. Which brings us to David Brooks’s Friday column:
Under Ryan, Obama charged, 10 million college students would get their financial aid cut by $1,000, Alzheimer’s research would be slashed, 200,000 children would lose their chance to enter Head Start.(More here.)
Where did Obama get these specifics? He imagined them. He imposed some assumptions that are nowhere to be found in the Ryan budget. He compared Ryan’s reduced spending increases with proposed growth, not current levels.
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