http://www.factcheck.org/elections-2008/the_budget_according_to_mccain_part_i.html
5/29/2008 12:29:53 PM
5/29/2008 12:36:00 PM
Welcome to last month. ThingProgress has something every other day on this.This is what McCain gets for saying he would try to balance the budget. Clinton faced the same problem in 1992. Because one's opponents loves to ask for specifics during the election, because they know you won't deliever (suprise suprise, no one likes cuts in spending or hikes in taxes). He should have followed Obama's lead and said he wouldn't balance the budget anytime soon. In doing so he's been able to propose billions of dollars in new spending without anyone batting an eye.
5/29/2008 12:38:16 PM
5/29/2008 12:55:33 PM
5/29/2008 1:03:08 PM
It's only acceptable to create threads trashing Obama now, haven't you realized this?
5/29/2008 1:03:56 PM
5/29/2008 1:12:06 PM
yeah but some would argue bush got rid of the money clinton saved up cause the dems were trying to make us socialist
5/29/2008 1:14:59 PM
Clinton didn't save up any money. He slashed defense and had a line item veto. That helps.I agree with ^^. The debt is NOT COOL and the Iraq War has added a good 30% to that. The other 70% was from GENERATIONS of fiscal abuse. Obama/Hillary offer nothing different and will even further the strain.
5/29/2008 1:20:31 PM
Oeuvre, can you tell me what a line item veto is? Without looking it up?
5/29/2008 1:35:00 PM
Yes. When given a bill, the President has the right to veto items off the bill, line by line, as opposed to vetoing the bill as a whole or passing the bill as a whole.I fully understand what that is and it was 90% of the reason that Clinton was able to have a balanced budget. And I applaud him for it.
5/29/2008 1:42:21 PM
Oh, I thought it sounded like you were against his use of a line item veto/using a talking point. Carry on.
5/29/2008 1:47:06 PM
No no, I wish EVERY president had this option. It's a great tool to weed out unnecessary spending.
5/29/2008 1:48:15 PM
i dont get why its such a big issue...i filled out one of those questionnaires back when there were still like 10 repub and 10 dem nominees(the questionnaire told you which candidates shared the most of your views), and one of the questions was like "do you support a line item veto"...i didnt know if i should support it or not, but the questionnaire made it sound like it was a big deal
5/29/2008 1:50:29 PM
Line item veto's will allow a president to allow only what they want in a bill to be passed.
5/29/2008 1:55:17 PM
it's a HUGE deal.Say there's a natural disaster or troops need funding. Congress appropriates money and controls that. The President sends them a request for funds and the reps can basically put in bridges to nowhere, a mil for peanut farmers, a mil for fecal matter testing, anything.The president receives the bill and he either has to sign it or veto it. If he needs the money for the disaster or war, then he has to fund bridges to nowhere.Clinton had the option of striking individual lines out of the spending bills so he could weed out the bridges and fecal matter testing.
5/29/2008 1:55:54 PM
well, the line item veto has been ruled unconstitutional, so there is no point in going back to that argument.
5/29/2008 1:56:39 PM
^ has it? Even with the veto override? I'd like to see the ruling as I deeply disagree. If there is a check on the presidents power with an override, I dont' see how it's unconstitutional.
5/29/2008 1:57:23 PM
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clinton_v._City_of_New_York
5/29/2008 1:59:29 PM
Yeah, I'm generally a fan of it.
5/29/2008 1:59:53 PM
^^ohhhh i thought this was something that had the chance of coming back...didnt know it was unconstitutional[Edited on May 29, 2008 at 2:01 PM. Reason : thanks for the link]
5/29/2008 2:00:57 PM
^^^ Wow pretty nonpartisan in the majority/minority opinions.I'm still a fan of it.It can come back. Pass the Law again and it will be tried before the SCOTUS again, this time, with perhaps a different outcome. It's not written into the constitutions as something you can't do. The opinion of the court was that it was unconstitutional. Or COngress could amend the constitution and add that in. Then the court would be bound by it.[Edited on May 29, 2008 at 2:02 PM. Reason : .]
5/29/2008 2:01:43 PM
There's another, weaker, version of the act out there apparently, but the last updates on it was in 2006 so I don't know how it fared.http://www.govtrack.us/congress/bill.xpd?bill=h109-4890[Edited on May 29, 2008 at 2:05 PM. Reason : .]
5/29/2008 2:03:59 PM
I was just reading on that.I support this, Democrat or Republican president. I think it checks the power on Congress to stuff bullshit into bills.
5/29/2008 2:06:09 PM
the line item veto only seems like a good idea if the president and majority of congress are opposite parties....for example, if bush had this in 2002 when the repubs controlled the house and senate it would have sucked if he kept taking off things and the dems didnt have enough votes to stop him
5/29/2008 2:06:53 PM
If we could confine that to appropriations bill which is where Clinton used it, I would say go for it. But DNL brings up a decent point.I just see it as wrong and immoral for a defense spending bill to include a bridge to nowhere in alaska.
5/29/2008 2:08:19 PM
The president already has that authority, it's his veto pen.
5/29/2008 2:12:35 PM
still a problem.The president can either fund the troops or veto. If he has to veto because of bullshit projects, then we have a huge problem.Can't exactly have a congressional bickering contest with people's lives on the line.
5/29/2008 2:19:07 PM
the way appropriations bills work is that the money is a recurring appropriation unless otherwise noted. The President vetoing the bill would do nothing to stop the funding of the troops. They would be funded at the current levels until the appropriation modification act became law.
5/29/2008 2:25:01 PM
5/29/2008 2:27:08 PM
imagine a war that's not bullshit. Like WWII
5/29/2008 2:34:53 PM
Okay, now imagine something that is completely different from the situation we are talking about, that's what you just presented.A WWII-like war would never run into funding problems, although something akin to the Marshall plan or an occupation post-war might depending on circumstances.
5/29/2008 2:47:47 PM
You don't think WWII was a budgetary hurdle?I'm saying the president, regardless of what war or what circumstance, should have the right to throw out bullshit funding assignments.The congress could bring the troops home TOMORROW therefore checking the president's bullshit war. Yet they don't.
5/29/2008 2:59:30 PM
Yes, the could. Do you think starving the military budget would be a good way to bring the troops home?
5/29/2008 3:00:56 PM
That's what they could do. They could not approve any of the president's funding requests. Without money, they come home.That's their option. Yet they don't.
5/29/2008 3:03:04 PM
You're really dense if you can't figure out why they don't do that.
5/29/2008 3:05:20 PM
I'm not saying it's a great choice, but it is a check on the president's power. I'm asking for the same in return.
5/29/2008 3:07:05 PM
Allowing line item veto's essentially turns the president into a legislator, which he is not supposed to be. A whole-bill veto is the presidents check. If the bill is not up to par do not pass it.
5/29/2008 3:09:28 PM
Free reign appropriations bills and bridges to nowhere in military spending bills turn senators and representatives into free spenders which they are not supposed to be.
5/29/2008 3:11:08 PM
Veto the entire bill and publicize each project that is not relevant on primetime TV. Do this enough and they will learn.
5/29/2008 3:17:47 PM