Skip to content
  • ABOUT
    • MISSION HISTORY
    • DIRECTORS/STAFF
    • Support
    • Contact Us
    • FAQ’S
    • FINANCIAL INFORMATION
  • WASTEWATCHER
  • MEDIA
    • CONGRESSIONAL RATINGS
    • PORKER OF THE MONTH
    • COMMENTARY
    • PRESS RELEASES
  • LEGISLATIVE
    • Communications to the States
    • Communications to Congress
    • Coalition Letters
    • Testimony
  • GET INVOLVED
    • Action Alerts
    • Support
DONATE
Facebook X-twitter Icon-instagram-1 Icon-youtube

Budget

Budget

Dithering on the Debt

12/01/2009 staff

On December 16, 2009, by a vote of 218-214, lawmakers voted to raise the debt ceiling by $290 billion to $12.394 trillion.  This is similar to the limit that banks and other lenders allow individuals to charge on their credit cards.  Ironically, during the recession, millions of Americans received notices from their credit card companies telling them their credit limit was being reduced.  Yet, this Congress is expanding its credit at rates far greater than any time in its history.

Budget, Commerce, Housing

Time for a Constitutional Line Item Veto

12/01/2009 staff

As the year draws to a close and the nation’s deficit soars to $1.4 trillion, Congress’s spendthrift behavior persists.  On December 16, 2009 President Obama signed a $1.4 trillion omnibus spending bill; $446.8 billion of that amount covered six of the seven remaining appropriations bill. 

Budget, Commerce, Energy

Weatherization: More Clouds on the Horizon

12/01/2009 Leslie Paige

The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA), the so-called stimulus package, continues to be a source of contention and controversy as the end of 2009 approaches.  When Congress first considered the $787 billion legislation, CAGW expressed grave concerns about the entire plan, especially those programs which received massive increases in their budgets.

Budget, Healthcare, PBM, PBMs, Pharmacy Benefits Manager

Congress Plans to Tap Medicare to Pay for Healthcare Reform

10/01/2009 staff

The Senate Finance Committee has reported out S. 1796, its version of a health care reform bill.  This was preceded, and indeed made possible, by an estimate from the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) that the bill would increase federal government spending by only $829 billion in 2010-2019.  With new taxes and reductions in projected spending in Medicare and Medicaid, CBO said this would actually result in a net saving to the federal budget of $81 billion over this period.  The bill’s advocates greeted this estimate with relief, tinged with self-congratulation for having produced a bill that, in the current environment, was considered by them to be fiscally responsible.

Budget, Taxes

Restricting Sugar Imports, Hidden Tax Increases, and Just Plain Waste

09/01/2009 staff

The antiquated U.S. sugar program continues to cause trouble for American companies, consumers and taxpayers.  While supporters of the program have always tried to claim that it doesn’t cost taxpayers any money, according to the Government Accountability Office (GAO), the highly restrictive import quota already costs U.S. consumers as much as $1.9 billion annually, which is nothing more than a sugar consumer tax.

Budget

OMB Plays Three Card Monte With Deficit Numbers

08/01/2009 staff

As a rite of August when the nation’s capital moves slowly, official Washington plays an interesting game of re-estimating the budget deficit.  It is known as the Mid-Session Budget Review and both the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) and the White House Office of Management and Budget (OMB) take part.  While both review the state of the federal budget and outlook for projected deficits over the next 10 years, they issue very different reports.

Budget, Defense, Taxes

Public Outrage Grounds Congressional Jets

08/01/2009 staff

In 2005, Rep. Don Young (R-Alaska) tried to fund the infamous “Bridge to Nowhere,” which would have connected the mainland of Alaska to an island of only 50 people.  After the bridge became the “poster child” for pork and taxpayers expressed their disdain, funding for the “Bridge to Nowhere” was eliminated. 

Budget, Education

California’s $7 Billion Bailout?

06/01/2009 staff

When Congress debates California’s requested $7 billion bailout, instead of looking at the benefits it could bring California, they first need to look at the source of the problem and understand the reasons why the state is in such trouble.  Citizens and business owners in California are outraged that the state government continues to raise taxes while refusing to eliminate wasteful spending.

Budget, General Waste

Stimulus not Stimulating

05/01/2009 Thomas Schatz

The White House announcement on May 20 of 100 projects in 100 days of the stimulus, a plan that was intended to be “timely, temporary, and targeted,” was greeted with great skepticism, including an ongoing dispute about the amount of money that has been spent and how many jobs have (or have not) been created.

Budget, General Waste

Blue Dogs and PAYGO – Living in La La Land

05/01/2009 Leslie Paige

On April 28, 2009, members of the so-called fiscally conservative “Blue Dog” Coalition introduced H.R. 2116, the “Fiscal Honesty and Accountability Act of 2009.”  According to their website, the measure “would strengthen Congress’ commitment to fiscal responsibility and accountability by reinstituting statutory pay-as-you-go (PAYGO) rules.  The legislation, which would require both the House and Senate to abide by PAYGO rules if enacted into law, has been a cornerstone of the Blue Dogs’ efforts to restore fiscal discipline to the federal government.” 

Posts pagination

Previous 1 … 34 35 36 … 38 Next

Search

Council for Citizens Against Government Waste works to eliminate waste, fraud, abuse, and mismanagement in government through research and public education.

  • MISSION HISTORY
  • DIRECTORS/STAFF
  • SUPPORT
  • FINANCIAL INFORMATION
  • CONTACT US
  • CAGW
  • 1-800-USA-DEBT ®
  • media@ccagw.org
  • 317 MASSACHUSETTS AVENUE, N.E.
    SUITE 300
    WASHINGTON, D.C. 20002

© Council for Citizens Against Government Waste