June 10, 2020
Permission to republish original opeds and cartoons granted.
National debt skyrockets $2.8 trillion since Jan. 2020 amid pandemic response, and we haven’t even gotten to phase four yet
The national
debt has skyrocketed a gargantuan $2.8 trillion since Jan. 2020 amid the U.S.
response to the Chinese coronavirus-induced recession, rising to $25.9 trillion
as of June 9, according to the U.S. Treasury. That’s a 12.1 percent increase,
and we’re not even halfway through the year yet, and Congress is still
contemplating phase four legislation to help the U.S. economy get back on its
feet after being shuttered in March and April — and that will likely be trillions
more. Already, trillions of dollars have been poured into payroll protection
for small, medium and large businesses, propping up state and local governments
and supporting hospitals. Already, the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) is
projecting a 39 percent annualized decrease in the Gross Domestic Product in the
second quarter and an overall $3.7 trillion budget deficit for the fiscal year that
began October amid plummeting revenue as 25 million Americans were furloughed
or unemployed during the pandemic response. And the House proposed phase four
bill would include another $3.5 trillion for 2020 and 2021, including another
$1.5 trillion in spending this year alone, according to CBO.
Video: Americans kneel to no man, ALG President Rick Manning declares
Are Americans willingly
giving away their liberty?
D.C. proves itself unworthy of home rule after evicting Utah National Guard
Americans for Limited
Government President Rick Manning: “The news that Washington, D.C. Mayor Muriel
Bowser forced the eviction of Utah National Guard personnel who flew in to
defend the city from rioters today is beyond belief. These young men and women came to our nation’s
capital to protect our federal government resources from Antifa bands
determined to wreak destruction. In her
action, Muriel Bowser proved that not only is she unsuited to be Mayor of the
federal city, but the entire concept of DC home rule is reckless and no longer
relevant. Washington, D.C. is a federal district. The federal government has primacy over its
control and in national security issues has absolute supremacy over the
District. While D.C. often complains
about not being treated as a state, they consistently prove that they are not
even a good city. It is time for
Congress to reconsider D.C.’s home rule, because if the local government
actively obstructs the defense of the District, then they have lost their right
to govern.”
National debt skyrockets $2.8 trillion since Jan. 2020 amid pandemic response, and we haven’t even gotten to phase four yet
By Robert Romano
The national debt has skyrocketed a gargantuan $2.8 trillion since Jan. 2020 amid the U.S. response to the Chinese coronavirus-induced recession, rising to $25.9 trillion as of June 9, according to the U.S. Treasury.
That’s a 12.1 percent increase, and we’re not even halfway through the calendar year yet, and Congress is still contemplating phase four legislation to help the U.S. economy get back on its feet after being shuttered in March and April — and that will likely be trillions more.
Already, trillions of dollars have been poured into payroll protection for small, medium and large businesses, propping up state and local governments and supporting hospitals.
Additionally, off-budget, the Federal Reserve has been intervening with hundreds of billions of emergency lending and quantitative easing. Since January, the Fed has purchased more than $1.8 trillion of U.S. treasuries, bringing the total to $4.1 trillion, to help keep interest rates low, more than $400 billion of mortgage backed securities to a total of $1.8 trillion, plus $447 billion of central bank liquidity swaps with foreign governments, swelling its balance sheet from $4.1 trillion to $7.1 trillion in a matter of months.
That is close to $6 trillion in fiscal and monetary stimulus combined, an unprecedented response—and Congress and the central bank aren’t through yet.
Already, the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) is projecting a 39 percent annualized decrease in the Gross Domestic Product in the second quarter and an overall $3.7 trillion budget deficit for the fiscal year that began in October amid plummeting revenue as 25 million Americans were furloughed or unemployed during the pandemic response.
And the House proposed phase four bill would include another $3.5 trillion of spending for 2020 and 2021, including another $1.5 trillion in spending this year alone, according to CBO.
One key factor affecting what comes next could be the June jobs report. In May, the U.S. economy created over 3.8 million jobs in the Bureau of Labor Statistics’ household survey, and 2.5 million in its establishment survey.
That shows that about 10 percent or more of the 25 million jobs lost during the economic closures and lockdowns, have been regained. Still a ways to go.
But another month like that, with big jobs gains, might change plans for what goes into phase four, according to Kevin Hassett, senior adviser to President Donald Trump. Hassett told CNBC’s Squawk Box, “We had a really good month of jobs numbers, if we get another month like that in June, then I think it would absolutely affect the things that we pursue in July in the phase four deal.”
Which, is a good question. How effective has the $6 trillion of combined fiscal and monetary stimulus already been?
Still, Hassett added, “the odds of there being a phase four deal are really close to 100 percent.”
So, something’s coming no matter what. The questions are what it will include, and how big, after the economy was struck by the equivalent of an asteroid. Stay tuned.
Robert Romano is the Vice President of Public Policy at Americans for Limited Government.
To view online: http://dailytorch.com/2020/06/national-debt-skyrockets-2-8-trillion-in-2020-amid-pandemic-response-and-we-havent-even-gotten-to-phase-four-yet/
Video: Americans kneel to no man, ALG President Rick Manning declares
To view online: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VGxmdiVRIl8
D.C. proves itself unworthy of home rule after evicting Utah National Guard
June 5, 2020, Fairfax, Va.—Americans for Limited Government President Rick Manning today issued the following statement urging Congress to end D.C. home rule:
“The news that Washington, D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser forced the eviction of Utah National Guard personnel who flew in to defend the city from rioters today is beyond belief. These young men and women came to our nation’s capital to protect our federal government resources from Antifa bands determined to wreak destruction. In her action, Muriel Bowser proved that not only is she unsuited to be Mayor of the federal city, but the entire concept of DC home rule is reckless and no longer relevant.
“Washington, D.C. is a federal district. The federal government has primacy over its control and in national security issues has absolute supremacy over the District. While D.C. often complains about not being treated as a state, they consistently prove that they are not even a good city. It is time for Congress to reconsider D.C.’s home rule, because if the local government actively obstructs the defense of the District, then they have lost their right to govern.”
To view online: https://getliberty.org/2020/06/d-c-proves-itself-unworthy-of-home-rule-after-evicting-utah-national-guard/