GOP leader on budget: 'Here it is, Mr. President'

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By Kristi Keck
CNN
 
  
  
 
(CNN) -- House Republicans on Thursday said they have come up with an 
alternative proposal to the president's budget, following criticism from 
Democrats that they have become the "party of no."
 

 


Rep. John Boehner says President Obama's budget is "completely irresponsible."
 
"Two nights ago the president said, 'We haven't seen a budget yet out of 
Republicans.' Well, it's just not true because -- Here it is, Mr. President," 
said House Minority leader Rep. John Boehner, as he held up a booklet that he 
said was a "blueprint for where we're going." 
 
The details of the GOP budget will be presented on the House floor next week, 
said Rep. Paul Ryan, R-Wisconsin. 
 
"We're going to show a leaner budget, a budget with lower taxes, lower spending 
and lower borrowing," Ryan said. 
 
President Obama and other Democrats have accused the Republicans of offering 
only criticism and no solutions when it comes to Obama's budget. Watch GOP 
leaders unveil their 'leaner' budget »
 
Earlier this month, the Democratic National Committee launched a "party of no" 
clock that was counting the time between the announcement of Obama's budget and 
the presentation of a Republican alternative.
 
Boehner on Thursday called Obama's record $3.6 trillion budget "completely 
irresponsible."
 
"Our plan curbs spending, creates jobs and cuts taxes, while reducing the 
deficit," said Boehner, R-Ohio. Read the GOP outline (pdf)
 
Asked where the cuts would be coming from, Boehner said, "We'll wait and see 
next week."
 
Rep. Mike Pence, R-Indiana, said Wednesday he hoped Congress would adopt the 
GOP alternative, but admitted, "It's not likely."
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Republican proposal (pdf) 
 
But, Pence said, he will always believe "that a minority in Congress plus the 
American people equals the majority." 
 
"We intend to take our case for fiscal discipline, growth and tax relief to the 
American people from sea to shining sea and if the American people will rise 
up, anything is possible on Capitol Hill," Pence said.
 
White House Press Secretary Robert Gibbs on Thursday laughed off the 
Republican's proposal, joking that their blueprint has more pictures of 
windmills than charts.
 
"It's interesting to have a budget that doesn't contain any numbers. I think 
the 'party of no' has become the 'party of no new ideas,' " he said at the 
daily briefing.
 
Obama defended his budget at an online town hall meeting Thursday, saying, 
"It's a budget that cuts the things we don't need to make room for the 
investments we do, a budget that cuts the massive deficits we've inherited in 
half, by the end of my first term, and offers a blueprint for America's success 
in the 21st century."
 
Obama maintains that his budget -- and its big investments in health care, 
energy and education -- are essential to economic recovery.
 
Facing objections to his proposals, Obama said Tuesday that "the critics tend 
to criticize, but they don't offer an alternative budget."
 
Democratic strategist and CNN political contributor Paul Begala reiterated that 
idea, saying Republicans weren't doing anything productive.
 
"Now the Republicans have what we Texans call the chutzpah to criticize Obama 
for doing too much," Begala wrote in a commentary for CNN.com. 
 
"But where are the Republicans?" Begala wrote. "Doing nothing but complaining. 
Unless and until they do offer an alternative, they really have no right to 
whine about the president. For now at least, GOP stands for 'Got 0 Plans.'" 
Read the commentary
 
But Republicans in Congress aren't the only lawmakers objecting to Obama's 
budget.
Some centrist Democratic senators, whose support is critical to passing the 
legislation, have raised concerns about the long-term impact of the president's 
spending plan on the federal deficit.
 
In a letter to the Senate Budget Committee dated Tuesday, 12 of the 16 members 
of the centrist Senate Democratic coalition -- which calls itself "the moderate 
Dems Working Group" -- expressed grave concerns about the direction of the 
president's budget. 
Senate Budget Committee Chairman Kent Conrad, D-North Dakota, trimmed the 
president's proposal in response to congressional projections showing 
larger-than-expected budget deficits over the next several years. 
 
"The president is exactly right in terms of his priorities for the country," 
Conrad said Thursday on CNN's "American Morning." 
 
"Reducing our dependence on foreign energy, focus on excellence and education, 
and health care reform. Those are the key priorities for the country as well as 
dramatically reducing the deficit but, look. We've had a new forecast come out 
that said we've lost $2.3 trillion of revenue in the next ten years, so 
obviously we have to make adjustments to his budget," he said.
 
Conrad said he had preserved the president's major initiatives in education, 
energy and health-care reform in the wake of "new realities" on finances 
without sacrificing the administration's deficit reduction goals.
 
Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid said Wednesday he is confident the full 
Senate will pass Conrad's version of the budget next week.
 
Publicly, the administration has tried to minimize differences between Obama's 
budget proposal and changes sought by congressional Democrats. 
 
The "House and Senate budget committees are taking up resolutions that are 
fully in line with the president's key priorities for the budget," White House 
Office of Management and Budget Director Peter Orszag said in a conference call 
Wednesday. "There have been some changes made ... but they are 98 percent the 
same as the budget the president sent up in February."
 
Later Wednesday, Obama huddled with Senate Democrats on Capitol Hill in an 
effort to save some major domestic priorities in his budget.

 
With some Democrats on the fence about the budget, Republican strategist Kevin 
Madden said the GOP now sees an opportunity for their party to make gains.
 
"There is a very strong degree of sticker shock, not only from Republicans up 
on Capitol Hill, but from Democrats," he said. "And I think what Republicans 
see an opportunity there ... that growing gap between his personal popularity 
and the popularity of his policies." 
 
CNN's Louise Schiavone contributed to this report.
 
 
http://www.cnn.com/2009/POLITICS/03/26/budget/index.html
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