Friend,
Earlier this week, we wrote to you about the disastrous bipartisan
budget deal that recently passed the House. Party leaders quietly
negotiate these deals amongst themselves and with the White House,
hoping people back home won’t realize what’s going on behind closed
doors. The Senate could vote on this bill as early as today, so we’re
here to make sure you do know.
Make no mistake: The entire Washington Establishment is united
behind increasing our already unsustainable $22 trillion national
debt, spending so much that annual interest payments alone
may soon exceed even our defense spending.
Buying everything you want may be easier at first and more fun than
prioritizing spending or putting money in the bank, but we expect our
elected officials to be good stewards of taxpayers’ dollars and to
look out for our country’s future. Instead, leaders are sacrificing
the prosperity and security of future generations for short-term
political gain.
This is immoral. But you can’t hold those officials accountable if
you don’t know the truth—and they prefer to keep you in the dark.
They’ll tell you, as the president has, that this spending is to help
veterans, or to help some other sympathetic group or cause, to stop
you from questioning what’s really in the bill.
What they won’t tell you is:
- The deal suspends the debt ceiling for two years, rather
than raising it by a specific dollar amount (as used to be the
practice), giving the government free rein to rack up untold amounts
of additional debt until the limit kicks back in. This is quite
convenient for politicians who don’t want to be held accountable,
since there won’t be another vote on this until after the 2020
elections.
- Even on paper, the bill offsets less than a quarter of its roughly
$320 billion in new spending, and none of those offsets will even
materialize for another 10 years. In other words, Congress is
channeling its favorite Popeye character, Wimpy, and saying “I’ll
gladly pay you Tuesday for a hamburger today.” The same politicians
who have regularly busted through the spending caps established in
2011—and are doing so again with this bill—expect you to believe that
a decade down the road, they’ll stand by and let billions of dollars
in cuts go into effect.
- Even if politicians stick to the offsets, that will do nothing to
address the fact that this budget deal increases discretionary
spending to near record levels, all while mandatory spending continues
on autopilot. It's been estimated that this bill alone could result in
over $1.5 trillion in new debt over the next decade.
- Once again, this budget deal was crafted by congressional leaders
and the president behind closed doors, without input from the hundreds
of other members also elected to represent their constituents in
Congress. The bill was made public less than 72 hours before the vote,
Justin and his colleagues weren’t allowed to offer amendments, members
were given little time to genuinely debate the bill, and they were
told by party leaders to take it or leave it. This isn’t
compromise—it’s a con job.
You can count on Justin to keep fighting against this kind of
irresponsible process and policy, and we’ll continue keeping you
informed about developments like this that party leaders would rather
you not know.
Thanks, as always, for
your support!
- Team Amash
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