So there are cuts in taxes for the rich and cuts in
entitlements for the poor. All is well in Amerika.

Cheers, Ken Hanly



Bush Budget Hikes War Funding
By ANDREW TAYLOR, Associated Press Writer

Friday, February 2, 2007


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(02-02) 19:14 PST WASHINGTON, (AP) --


Keeping troops in Iraq for another year and a half
will cost nearly a quarter-trillion dollars — about
$800 for every man, woman and child in the U.S. —
under the budget President Bush will submit to
Congress Monday.


Bush will ask for $100 billion more for military and
diplomatic operations in Iraq and Afghanistan this
year and seek $145 billion for 2008, a senior Pentagon
official said Friday. Those requests come on top of
about $344 billion spent for Iraq since the 2003
invasion that toppled Saddam Hussein.


At the same time, Bush's budget request will propose
cost curbs on Medicare providers, a cap on subsidy
payments to wealthier farmers and an increase to
$4,600 in the maximum Pell Grant for low-income
college students.


Bush's proposal, totaling almost $3 trillion for the
budget year starting Oct. 1, will kick off a major
debate with the new Democratic-controlled Congress.
Democrats are sure to press for more money for
domestic programs, and they've signaled they won't
consider renewing Bush's tax cuts until closer to
2010, when they are to expire.


The White House plan will produce a surplus in 2012,
budget director Rob Portman said Friday — assuming
strong growth in tax revenues, continued curbs on
domestic agencies' spending and relatively modest cuts
to farm programs, Medicare and the Medicaid health
care program for the poor and disabled.


Bush's plan assumes Congress extends the two rounds of
tax cuts that were passed in 2001 and 2003.


Portman said Bush's budget submission contains about a
1 percentage point cut in the rapid growth in Medicare
— which averages almost 8 percent a year without
changes — to squeeze about $66 billion in savings over
five years from the federal health care program for
the elderly.


Bush would curb payments to health care providers such
as hospitals, and would require more of the
higher-income recipients to pay greater premiums.


"We need to get these unsustainable growth rates under
control," Portman said, noting that Congress passed
more ambitious cuts in 1997, when President Clinton
and a GOP-controlled Congress enacted more than $160
billion in Medicare savings. "This is a good first
step."


However, Congress has since given back much of the
1997 savings, particularly cuts in doctors' fees.
Smaller cuts proposed last year got nowhere in a
Congress controlled by Republicans.


The requests, to be released Monday, would bring war
spending for fiscal 2007 to about $170 billion, with
the $145 billion for 2008 representing a decline.


The additional request for the current year includes
$93.4 billion for the Pentagon and $6 billion for
foreign aid and State Department costs — on top of $70
billion approved by Congress in September.


The White House assumes war spending will be down to
$50 billion in 2009 with none planned beyond then in
hopes the war in Iraq will have wound down.


Bush's recent budgets have been met with skepticism by
Democrats, partly because they have left out war costs
and expensive changes to the alternative minimum tax,
which is hitting an increasing number of middle class
taxpayers. The Congressional Budget Office estimates
updating the AMT for inflation would cost $93 billion
in 2012 alone.


The increase in war spending — up from $120 billion
approved by Congress for 2006 — have been prompted by
large costs to replace equipment destroyed in combat
or worn out in harsh conditions in Iraq and
Afghanistan.


The Iraq requests are certain to face scrutiny by the
Democrats, who already are debating whether to try to
block Bush's request to increase troop levels in
Baghdad.


Critics say the Pentagon is also using war-money
requests to modernize the armed services with weaponry
— such as the next-generation Joint Strike Fighters or
the controversial V-22 tilt-rotor aircraft — unlikely
to see action in Iraq or Afghanistan. The Pentagon
counters that the planes are replacing aircraft that
are no longer manufactured.


The additional budget request for Iraq is far below
lists assembled by the military branches, which were
given a green light last fall by Deputy Defense
Secretary Gordon England. He instructed the four
services that they could add projects connected to the
broader fight against terrorism, though critics said
that could be interpreted to cover almost anything.


Those lists were met with resistance in the White
House and on Capitol Hill, and the Pentagon pared them
back in the request it forwarded to the White House's
Office of Management and Budget, which trimmed them
further.


In addition to its share of the $245 billion for the
wars, the Defense Department will seek $481.4 billion
to run the department for 2008 — an 11.3 percent
increase over the $432 billion amount approved by
Congress for this year, according to a defense
official and budget documents.


That total includes about $12 billion to increase the
size of the Army and Marine Corps, to meet the growing
strains of fighting wars on two fronts, said the
Pentagon official, who requested anonymity because the
budget has not yet been released.


___


Associated Press writers Kevin Freking and Lolita C.
Baldor contributed to this story.




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