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Paul Ryan Budget Proposal Approved By House Panel

RICARDO ALONSO-ZALDIVAR and ALAN FRAM   04/ 6/11 10:42 PM ET   AP

Paul Ryan Budget Proposal

WASHINGTON — The Republican-led House Budget Committee approved a $3.5 trillion budget for 2012 on Wednesday that was hailed by its GOP authors as an end to a federal spending binge but savaged by Democrats as an assault on retirees and the poor.

The party-line 22-16 vote underscored the sharp partisan divide over the blueprint, crafted by the committee's chairman, Rep. Paul Ryan, R-Wis., at a time of record federal red ink. The measure lays the groundwork for a decade of cuts in spending, taxes and deficits, tempered by a shift in medical costs from the government to future retirees and a reshaping of the two chief federal health programs for the elderly and poor, Medicare and Medicaid.

The budget's approval, which followed a daylong debate by the committee, sends the plan to the full House, where GOP leaders hope for a vote in the coming days.

Though the blueprint covers the entire reach of government, committee members focused much of their attention on health and other social programs, from which Republicans were proposing to wring hundreds of billions of dollars in savings over the next 10 years. Ryan said that with sky-high deficits, the government needs to limit its mission to programs that are truly needed.

"We don't want to turn the safety net into a hammock that lulls people to lives of complacencies and dependencies, into a permanent condition where they never get on their feet," he said.

Rep. Chris Van Hollen of Maryland, the panel's top Democrat, said Republicans were protecting tax breaks for corporations and the wealthy at the expense of the middle class and the poor. The Republican budget proposes whittling the current 35 percent top tax rate on individuals and businesses to 25 percent.

"It doesn't reform Medicare, it deforms and dismantles it," Van Hollen said of the GOP's budget. As for Medicaid, the budget "rips apart the safety net" for poor and older people, he added.

The budget is a nonbinding road map whose taxing and spending changes are supposed to be enacted in later, separate legislation. But Ryan's plan has no chance of being approved by the Democratic-run Senate, making it more of a statement of priorities that candidates are likely to embrace or attack during the 2012 campaigns.

As committee debate extended into the evening, Republicans batted down a parade of Democratic amendments which, like the budget itself, were designed to score political points. By party-line votes, the panel rejected one amendment blocking tax cuts for millionaires and another rejecting reductions in Medicaid benefits for elderly nursing home residents.

"It's unconscionable that Republicans are abandoning our seniors, including our sickest and most frail seniors, for a political cause" of reducing the size of government, Rep. Allyson Schwartz, D-Pa., said.

Republicans castigated Democrats for trying to curb the blueprint's tax cuts, saying today's level of taxes and regulation make it harder for businesses to create jobs.

"Why don't you guys like small-business people?" asked Rep. Ken Calvert, R-Calif.

Ryan's budget would shift more rising health care costs from taxpayers to individuals, medical service providers and states, giving them all an incentive to avoid waste and aim for quality and efficiency.

Medicare would remain largely unchanged for people now 55 and older. Starting in 2022, new retirees would get fixed amounts of money from the government to buy private insurance. The sick would get more money than others, the wealthy less.

If that approach didn't work, as an analysis by the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office suggests could happen, future Medicare beneficiaries, providers and states would feel the pain directly. That could send them right back to Washington clamoring for more subsidies.

The budget office analysis said future retirees would pay considerably more for health care under Ryan's approach. That's because the Medicare benefits package would be more expensive to deliver through private insurance companies, which pay doctors and hospitals more than the government and have higher overhead costs.

By 2030, the government payment would cover only about one-third of the typical retiree's total health care costs, the budget office said.

Ryan also would gradually raise the current Medicare eligibility age of 65 to 67 by 2033. And he would revive the "doughnut hole" gap in Medicare prescription drug coverage that last year's health care law eliminated, the budget office said.

Medicaid, the federal-state program that covers low-income and severely disabled people, would be converted into a block grant program giving each state a lump sum to design its own insurance plans. The poor would no longer, under federal law, have a right to health care.

The budget would repeal President Barack Obama's health care overhaul, which became law last year.

Although Ryan's plan reduces spending by some $5 trillion over the next decade, that still wouldn't bring the federal budget into balance. Next year's near $1 trillion shortfall would still be nearly $400 billion in 2021.

He also would limit next year's spending for most domestic programs to $360 billion – nearly 25 percent less than Obama has proposed for everything from agriculture research to building facilities for veterans. That underlines the drastic differences between the two parties' visions of government.

___

Online:

House GOP budget: http://budget.house.gov/fy2012budget/

Congressional Budget Office: http://www.cbo.gov/doc.cfm?index12128

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WASHINGTON — The Republican-led House Budget Committee approved a $3.5 trillion budget for 2012 on Wednesday that was hailed by its GOP authors as an end to a federal spending binge but savaged ...
WASHINGTON — The Republican-led House Budget Committee approved a $3.5 trillion budget for 2012 on Wednesday that was hailed by its GOP authors as an end to a federal spending binge but savaged ...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Fishboy43
01:03 AM on 04/09/2011
The most surprising thing about this budget proposal is that it was not written with a crayon.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Persson4
09:40 PM on 04/08/2011
Federal government is the equalizer between states. Ryan's budget would force 50 states to compete against each other for the best and brightest. Many states would have economies similar to third world countries. Others with access to trade and abundance of resources would continue to flourish. Ryan is basically turning back the clock. How about focusing on growing our GDP! There are plenty of opportunities still out there!
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Hoosierbrad
I know it when I see it.
04:29 PM on 04/08/2011
So, it seems the Republicans in the House of Representatives again wasted their time passing legislation that has no chance of going anywhere. How is that news?
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03:44 PM on 04/08/2011
Here are some facts you really should know about this budget and the way it is being sold to you.

Please take a minute to watch. If you are pro-Ryan and find fault with what you see, please come back and share your view.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/04/07/rachel-maddow-beltway-media-paul-ryan_n_846218.html

Thanks
02:45 PM on 04/08/2011
All the budget projections in Paul Ryan's plan are completely made up. According to the CBO, the plan would actually INCREASE the deficit, while dismantling Medicare.

The projections are actually quite hilarious, if you look at them. Unemployment magically drops almost to zero in just a couple of years? Tax revenues go through the roof, even though there are massive tax cuts? What were the people who came up with this stuff smoking?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
HeartT
Author, OUTSIDE CHILD, New Orleans
02:44 PM on 04/08/2011
Pay attention folks. The Republicans are not just going after your voices in the workplace, they want your lifelines, Social Security and Medicare dismantled. Think about this for minute without your biases and those empty fear slogans about the deficit. If people don't have any money, they can't buy anything. And if people aren't buying, the economy isn't growing. And when the economy isn't growing, corporations will do whatever they can to turn a profit. That includes, low wages and no benefits, job outsourcing, ponzi scams, high prices. Sounds familiar? Tax cuts, deregulation and greed. That's the republican agenda. We've been there, done that. Snooze on this and that's what you will get.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Nevervotesrepublican
Congressional Approval... 5%
11:52 AM on 04/08/2011
What is more of a threat to America, Iraq,/Afghanistan or no health care for our seniors. This is a no brainer and the republicans are wrong again.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
bluepond
person
10:58 AM on 04/08/2011
*rolling on the floor crying*
10:40 AM on 04/08/2011
I looked up ruthless in the dictionary. It said Paul Ryan.

I looked up ignorant in the dictionary. It said Paul Ryan, too.

Wonder why?
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Downrivers
Siskiyou Mountains
01:29 PM on 04/08/2011
Look up "Death Panel" ...Ryan is the poster boy.
09:28 AM on 04/08/2011
"the GOP’s 73-page “Path to Prosperity” document."

Therein lies the problem the Dems have with this plan. It is so small even the weakest link in our society will have time to read it and determine its validity.

"Ryan’s aim is “government so small you can drown it in a bathtub,” said Rep. John Larson (D.-Conn.)".

Ya think? The last time I read the history of the founders of this republic, "limited" not "bloated and lavish" government was the intent.

The real problem with the modern democrat, which has evolved into the Progressive/Socialist/Marxist/Communist behemoth it is today, is their deficiency of knowledge of the original intent of the authors of the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution.

Of course it really isn't their fault, most are the consequence of their public school indoctrination.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
bluepond
person
11:02 AM on 04/08/2011
I'm fairly certain that their intent was not to have future citizens develop a worshipful cult of "the founders", but to maintain a living and flexible government. I'm fairly certain that they would be appalled by the selfishness and lack of understanding of social contract that is evidenced today.
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03:59 PM on 04/08/2011
Is it fair to judge those men by their actions? If so, the original intent of the authors of the Constitution was to clearly leave out everything in the Bill of Rights.

Is that where you want to take this? You did say Original Intent.

They knew as you seem not to that the constitution is a means, not an end. They gave us an unmistakeable object lesson by not treating the constitution as sacrosanct object of reverence but as a tool which should be very carefully reshaped and resharpened as time goes on.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Gary Strawley
12:07 AM on 04/08/2011
Hope u can firgure this out for your self!! The goal of the gop is the dumbing down of the american
people! That way the corperations will be able to get cheap labor, and wipe out the middle class!
The rich should pay share too! The rich should pay their share too!!
The rich Should Pay Their Share Too!!! The rich Should Pay Their Share Too!!!!!
The goal is a GOVERNMENT FOR BIG BUSINESS, BUY BIG BUSINESS!!!!!
THINK A GOVERNMENT FOR BIG BUSINESS and the rich only!!! WAKE UP PLEASE!!!
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
azxff
Don't drink the tea...
12:01 AM on 04/08/2011
There you go seniors. 22 Republicans who are now on record as voting for the elimination of Medicare.
10:46 AM on 04/08/2011
Do you think it will get back to the voter? This is the first I heard of it.
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04:06 PM on 04/08/2011
Do you remember the early Tea Party gatherings? The ones at which many of these Republicans stood beside people carrying signs saying "Hands Off My Medicare!"?

Yeah those Republicans were slapping backs and handing out "Attaboys"s.

"Don't let that black so-and-so take away your Medicare (and kill your granny) with his reform of health insurance system."

I guess the Tea Party didn't hear what the Republicans said next, under their breath: "Don't let Obama take it away, because then we won't be able to put a pink ribbon on it and hand it to the insurance cartel that keeps us in prayer books and call-boys"

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/04/07/rachel-maddow-beltway-media-paul-ryan_n_846218.html
11:19 PM on 04/07/2011
As long as he leaves entitlement spending off the table he is doomed to fail.

http://www.rationalpublicradio.com/does-anyone-have-the-integrity-to-cut-entitlements-not-paul-ryan.html
HUFFPOST PUNDIT
Freesia2
I'm nicer than I appear in print. :-)
11:15 PM on 04/07/2011
Paul has a vested interest in privatizing Medicare...no wait. The GOP have a new word for it now...ah. "Personalizing" Medicare (sounds like VIP seats doesn't it? To watch the destruction of people. Shout out to Rome. Release the lions!):

"Representative Paul Ryan’s budget proposal to end traditional Medicare for future generations would benefit private insurers, whose employees have given the Wisconsin Republican more money than any other industry.
Ryan has received $672,203 from insurance employees and their families since 1997, his largest industry source of campaign donations, according to the Center for Responsive Politics, a Washington research group. The figure includes all insurers, not just health-insurance companies. Employees of Blue Cross/Blue Shield companies and their trade group gave $48,650, his ninth-largest individual source of funds.

His proposal would transform Medicare, the federal health- care program for senior citizens, for all Americans now 54 and under. Under his budget plan released yesterday, the government would provide subsidies for the purchase of private insurance." (Daily Kos)

Uh huh. Budget was it? Oh...wrong word again. "Cause". You're lyin' Ryan.
10:17 PM on 04/07/2011
A simple and fast way to get the budget passed - withhold the pay checks of all the members of Congress. Betcha it gets passed fast!
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
azxff
Don't drink the tea...
12:03 AM on 04/08/2011
Over 3/4ths of the members of Congress are independently wealthy with the majority of them being millionaires...Why would missing a few paychecks for a few thousand dollars bother them?