Conservatives, Tea Party Leaders Send Letter to Crossroads High-Dollar Donors

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Conservative and Tea Party leaders are sending a letter to high dollar (six and seven figure) donors to American Crossroads. The letter lays out how Crossroads has been a failed investment to the tune of hundreds of millions of dollars, and how Crossroads has chosen to blame the Tea Party for its failures instead of owning them and retooling for victory.  Among the information provided:The Sunlight Foundation found Crossroads’ success rate in the 2012 cycle to be 1.29%.  The signers of the letter close with this: As conservative leaders who represent millions of grassroots conservatives, we strongly urge you to consider this information as you are making your decisions about political giving in the future.”

Text of the letter:

Dear

You have likely heard over the last several weeks about a new effort called the Conservative Victory Project that will be supported by Karl Rove and the Crossroads organizations. Their stated purpose is to identify conservative candidates in Republican primaries capable of winning elections. As leaders in the conservative movement who have been active in conservative and Republican politics for decades, we are writing to set the record straight.

The 2012 election cycle saw our first billion-dollar campaign. Recently, the non-partisan Sunlight Foundation did an analysis of the money spent. They measured the effectiveness of political spending by the amount of money spent on a successful effort—either electing a chosen candidate or defeating a chosen candidate. They found that the success rate of the Crossroads effort was 1.29%.

Now, in an attempt to explain the astonishingly low return on the hundreds of millions of dollars investment in Crossroads, Karl Rove and others are attempting to blame conservatives and the tea party. But a simple analysis shows this to be simply untrue. In 2012, the only Senate Republican winners were Jeff Flake, Deb Fischer, and Ted Cruz—all of whom enjoyed significant tea party and conservative support. Meanwhile, more moderate candidates like Tommy Thompson, Heather Wilson, Rick Berg, and Denny Rehberg went down to defeat despite significant support from Crossroads.

It was firmly expected that Republicans would capture the Senate in 2012. It is inexcusable that they failed and, in fact, lost two seats. The facts speak for themselves. It was not conservatives. Not one moderate Republican challenger won. According to the Sunlight Foundation, not one Senate challenger supported by Crossroads won.

There was another, equally important reason Republicans fared so poorly: Groups like Crossroads squandered hundreds of millions of dollars in what were arguably the most inept campaign advertising efforts ever.

Mr. Rove and his allies must stop blaming conservatives for his disastrous results. It is time for him to take ownership of his record. He must also stop posturing himself as a conservative: his record supporting wasteful government spending and moderate candidates over conservatives spans decades.

No matter how he positions himself in this attempt at damage control, Mr. Rove’s efforts will not elect the type of leaders who will come to Washington to fight for conservative principles. In fact, they are likely to stifle the emergence of candidates like Marco Rubio, Pat Toomey, and Rand Paul. Further, the model that will be employed by the Conservative Victory Project has proven to be ineffective and a waste of political resources.

As conservative leaders who represent millions of grassroots conservatives, we strongly urge you to consider this information as you are making your decisions about political giving in the future.

Signed,

L. Brent Bozell

Chairman, ForAmerica

Jenny Beth Martin

Co-Founder, Tea Party Patriots

Richard Viguerie

Chairman, Conservative HQ

David Bossie

President, Citizens United

Amy Kremer

Chairman, Tea Party Express

Tony Perkins

President, Family Research Council

Hon. Ken Blackwell

President, Constitutional Congress Inc.

William Walton

Rappahannock Ventures

Diana Banister

Director, Citizens for the Republic

Kay R. Daly

President, Coalition for a Fair Judiciary

Elaine Donnelly

President of the Center for Military Readiness

Brian Brown

President, National Organization for Marriage

Chairman, ActRight.com

Curt Levey

President, Committee for Justice

Phil Burress

Chairman, Citizens for Community Values Action

Susan A. Carleson

President, The American Civil Rights Union

Craig Shirley
Reagan Biographer

Ralph Benko

Forbes.com Contributor

Frank Gaffney

President, Center for Security Policy * (* for identification purposes only)

 

 

Republicans Want Their Party to Move in a More Conservative Direction

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60% Six-in-ten Republican voters say they want to see the GOP move in a more conservative direction.

One of the major annual events for conservatives is the Conservative Political Action Conference  whose theme this year is “America’s Future: The Next Generation of Conservatives.” The conference  meets in the Washington area annually, and this year’s event, which begins today, comes at a time when Republican Party sentiment is to make the GOP more conservative.

In a post-election survey conducted Nov. 8-11, 2012, 60% of Republican voters said GOP leaders should move in a more conservative direction while just 31% want to see them move in a more moderate direction.  In contrast, Democrats want their party to move in a more moderate — rather than a more liberal — direction by a 55% to 35% margin.

Although these views partly reflect the fact that conservatives make up a larger share of Republicans than liberals do of Democrats, this difference is evident even among the ideological wings of each party. Fully 70% of conservative Republicans want the GOP to move in a more conservative direction. Liberal Democrats are divided; 46% want the party to move in a more liberal direction while 45% prefer a more moderate move by the Democratic Party.

A Pew Research survey conducted in Aug. 2011 found that an increasing number of voters overall already perceived the Republican Party as very conservative. Just over one-in-five (23%) of voters regarded the GOP as very conservative compared to 18% who said so in June 2010. The percentages of those who saw the Democrats as liberal or moderate remained the same, at 32% and 26% respectively.

The survey also found that Republican voters see themselves as somewhat more conservative than they see their party. Those perceptions were amplified among Republicans and Republican-leaning independents who agree with the Tea Party.

Read more

 

 

 

Bozell on Ryan Budget: “Mr. Ryan and the Republicans are Presenting Themselves as ‘Democrat Lite.’”

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Bozell: “The only thing the Ryan budget makes clear is that Paul Ryan spent too much time campaigning with Mitt Romney”

“Mr. Ryan and the Republicans are presenting themselves as ‘Democrat Lite.’”

 

ALEXANDRIA, Va. – ForAmerica Chairman L. Brent Bozell III today released a statement in response to Paul Ryan’s budget.

“The only thing the Ryan budget makes clear is that Paul Ryan spent too much time campaigning with Mitt Romney. Mr. Ryan and the House GOP’s budget spends almost as much as the President and Senate Democrats’ does, over $40 trillion in the next decade. This is not fiscal conservatism.While I applaud Mr. Ryan for repealing ObamaCare in his bill, he and the GOP missed their opportunity to take meaningful action against the bill by defunding it in the Continuing Resolution last week. Passing this bill does nothing to stop Obamacare. Rather than present a contrasting vision of an America that is built on freedom, prosperity and virtue, once again Mr. Ryan and the Republicans are presenting themselves as ‘Democrat Lite.’ Only a conservative vision for the country, that stands in stark contrast to President Obama’s liberal policies, and that reduces the size of this oppressive federal leviathan will fire up the grassroots and change the country’s trajectory.”

Budgetology: A Legacy Killer

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Budgetology: A Legacy Killer

The White House has long maintained that any “balanced approach” to deficit reduction must include meaningful reforms to entitlement programs like Medicare, Medicaid and Social Security.  President Obama even went up to Capitol Hill earlier this week to send a message to his fellow Democrats that the time has come to “embrace” changes.  And at the beginning of his first term in 2009, President Obama acknowledged that “the nation’s long-term economic recovery cannot be attained unless the government finally gets control over its most costly entitlement programs.”  So after all this, how can the White House support a budget that once again punts on the biggest drivers of government spending; ensuring they continue down a path towards insolvency while adding trillions in unfunded liabilities?

SENATE BUDGET PUNTS ON ENTITLEMENTS, WHITE HOUSE BACKTRACKS ON CALL FOR REFORM

White House Backs Senate Budget Despite Failure To Reform Entitlements:

POLITICO: “White House Endorses Senate Dem Budget.” “White House press secretary Jay Carney praised the budget proposed by Senate Democrats on Wednesday, saying it represents a balanced approach to deficit reduction that won’t place an undue burden on the middle class.” (Donavan Slack, “White House Endorses Senate Dem Budget,” POLITICO, 3/13/13)

Senate Budget Offers “No Major Changes” To Entitlement Programs. “Senate Democrats answered that question by putting forth a plan that stabilizes the debt held by the public to roughly 70 percent of gross domestic product by 2023, without proposing any major overhaul of the entitlement programs.” (Nancy Cook, “In New Budget, Senate Democrats Offer Alternative Political Vision,”  National Journal, 3/14/13)

“Only Minor Trims” To Biggest Drivers Of Government Spending: “Senate Budget Committee Chairman Patty Murray (D-Wash.) announced a budget blueprint that proposes only minor trims to Medicare and Medicaid — the biggest drivers of government spending — and vows to make the cuts ‘without harming beneficiaries.’” (Lori Montgomery, “Democrats slow to back Obama on Medicare and Social Security cuts,” The Washington Post, 3/14/13)

White House Previously Acknowledged Importance Of Reform As Part Of Balanced Approach:

White House Claims That Any “Balanced Approach” Includes Entitlement Reforms. “White House officials rejected Republican suggestions that Mr. Obama has not been serious enough about tackling the growth of entitlement spending. ‘He [Obama] is committed, every time he talks about this, to a balanced approach that includes both, you know, revenues, spending cuts and savings through entitlement reforms,’ said Jay Carney, the White House press secretary.” (Peter Baker, “Obama Tilts Tax Debate Away From Spending Cuts,” New York Times, 11/29/12)

President Obama: “I Believe That We Have To Continue To Take A Serious Look At How We Reform Our Entitlements, Because Health Care Costs Continue To Be The Biggest Driver Of Our Deficits.” (President Barack Obama, Remarks By The President At A News Conference, The White House, 11/14/12)

Entitlement Reform “Central” To Containing Spending. “As president-elect, Obama said entitlement reform would be ‘a central part’ of his administration’s attempts to contain federal spending.” (Carrie Budoff Brown, “Obama Dodges ‘Hard Choices’ On Entitlements,”POLITICO, 1/22/13)

Widely Reported That Obama Was Willing To Address Entitlements. “During the debt ceiling fight and the fiscal cliff fight, Obama was (widely reportedly) willing to make cuts to entitlements in exchange for higher taxes from Republicans.”  (Joseph Wiesenthal, “Obama’s Inauguration Speech Dealt A Devastating Blow To Deficit Hawks,” Business Insider, 1/22/13)

“Obama Acknowledged That Social Security And Medicare — Big Drivers Of Federal Spending — Wouldn’t Survive Without Some Changes To Save Money.” (Ginger Gibson, “President Obama to Democrats: Entitlements May Have To Change,” POLITICO, 3/12/13)

A FAILED SALES PITCH?

President Obama Tells Democrats To Embrace Changes To Entitlement Programs:“[President Obama] warned that Democrats need to embrace at least some changes to unsustainable entitlement programs in order to achieve their long-term priorities. The president made the case, senators attending the luncheon said, to protect entitlements for future generations — a key Democratic priority in negotiations with Republicans over a deficit reduction deal known as a grand bargain.” (Ginger Gibson, “President Obama to Democrats: Entitlements May Have To Change,” POLITICO, 3/12/13)

OBAMA UNDERSTANDS IMPORTANCE OF REFORM TO HIS LEGACY

Failure To Reform Entitlements Will Mean A “Failed Presidency”:

Entitlements “Lurking Like A Legacy Killer.” “Unless Obama seizes the opportunity in the next few months, entitlement reform will hang over his second term, lurking like a legacy-killer if he hands off the task to the next president, deficit hawks warn.” (Carrie Budoff Brown, “Obama Dodges ‘Hard Choices’ On Entitlements,” POLITICO, 1/22/13)

Former Sen. Alan Simpson: ”[Obama] knows what to do and if he doesn’t get a handle on entitlements and the solvency of Social Security, he will have a failed presidency.” (Rebekah Metzler, “Simpson: Obama Headed for ‘Failed Presidency’ Without Entitlement Reforms,” US News, 2/19/13)

Erskine Bowles, Former Clinton WH Chief Of Staff, Says It’s Up To Democrats To Move Towards Entitlement Reform.  “Democrats need to move on reforming entitlements to get a year-end budget deal, former Clinton White House chief of staff Erskine Bowles said Wednesday after talks between House Republicans leaders and chief executives of big U.S. companies. … He said Republicans were clear that there’s need for revenue and for entitlement reforms – and added it’s up to Democrats to move in that direction.” (Robert Schroeder, Democrats must move on entitlements in cliff deal, Bowles says,” MarketWatch, 11/29/12)

President Obama Has Been Calling For Entitlement Reform For Years:

July 2006: Sen. Barack Obama Said, “We’re Going To Have To Talk About Entitlements …  Difficult To Have That Conversation…” Obama: “The — I think all of us are aware that at some point, in order to get our deficit under control, there are going to be revenue issues that we’ve got to bring up and there are going to be spending issues that we’re going to bring — and we’re going to have to talk about entitlements and we’re going to have to control costs and it is very difficult to have that conversation, particularly at a time when Americans are feeling squeezed and more vulnerable, if they think that the money is being wasted.” (Sen. Barack Obama, U.S. Senator Tom Coburn (R-Ok) Holds A Hearing On S. 2590, The Federal Funding Accountability And Transparency Act Of 2006, 7/19/06)

In 2009, Obama Pledged To Reform Social Security And Medicare. “President-elect Barack Obama pledged yesterday to shape a new Social Security and Medicare ‘bargain’ with the American people, saying that the nation’s long-term economic recovery cannot be attained unless the government finally gets control over its most costly entitlement programs.” (Michael D. Shear, “Obama Pledges Reform Of Social Security, Medicare Programs,” The Washington Post, 1/16/09)

“Obama Pledges Reform of Social Security, Medicare Programs” (in 2009): ”What we have done is kicked this can down the road. We are now at the end of the road and are not in a position to kick it any further,” [President Obama] said. “We have to signal seriousness in this by making sure some of the hard decisions are made under my watch, not someone else’s.” (Michael D. Shear, “Obama Pledges Reform of Social Security, Medicare Programs,” The Washington Post, 1/16/09)

Budgetology: Upset Alert & Debt Clock Violation

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Budgetology: Upset Alert 

Yesterday, President Obama went up to Capitol Hill to make his position on entitlements crystal clear by calling on fellow Democrats to embrace reforms. As the Senate unveils their budget, all eyes will be watching to see if they follow the president’s lead and “embrace” change, or if they will continue to put off addressing the biggest drivers of our long-term debt.  It’s time for Washington to face reality; Medicare, Medicaid and Social Security will only survive with significant changes. Any meaningful reform must address entitlements.

OBAMA TO DEMS ON ENTITLEMENT REFORM: EMBRACE IT

For Any Serious Reform To Be Achieved, Entitlements Must Be Addressed:

President Obama Tells Democrats To Embrace Changes To Entitlement Programs:“[President Obama] warned that Democrats need to embrace at least some changes to unsustainable entitlement programs in order to achieve their long-term priorities. The president made the case, senators attending the luncheon said, to protect entitlements for future generations — a key Democratic priority in negotiations with Republicans over a deficit reduction deal known as a grand bargain.” (Ginger Gibson, “President Obama to Democrats: Entitlements May Have To Change,” POLITICO, 3/12/13)

“Obama Acknowledged That Social Security And Medicare — Big Drivers Of Federal Spending — Wouldn’t Survive Without Some Changes To Save Money.” (Ginger Gibson, “President Obama to Democrats: Entitlements May Have To Change,” POLITICO, 3/12/13)

But Not All Democrats Are Ready To Go Along With The President:

More Than Half  Letter To The President Warning Against Entitlement Reform: “One hundred and seven of the 200 House Democrats signed a letter to Obama threatening to vote ‘against any and every cut to Medicare, Medicaid or Social Security benefits — including raising the retirement age or cutting the cost of living adjustments that our constituents earned and need.’” (Kate Nocera, “Democrats not sold on grand bargain,” POLITICO, 3/10/13)

Senate Democrats Object To President Obama’s Changes To Entitlement Programs: “President Obama began three days of meetings on Capitol Hill on Tuesday by fielding about a dozen questions from Senate Democrats about ongoing budget negotiations, an immigration overhaul and his administration’s unmanned aerial drone program.  During the 90-minute exchange, Obama also heard objections from more liberal senators regarding potential cuts to entitlement programs as part of a bipartisan compromise on taxes and spending, according to senators in attendance.” (Ed O’Keefe and Paul Kane, “Obama Meets with Senate Democrats,” The Washington Post, 3/12/13)

The White House Has Long-Maintained That Any “Balanced Approach” Must Include Entitlement Reform:

White House Claims That Any “Balanced Approach” Includes Entitlement Reforms. “White House officials rejected Republican suggestions that Mr. Obama has not been serious enough about tackling the growth of entitlement spending. ‘He [Obama] is committed, every time he talks about this, to a balanced approach that includes both, you know, revenues, spending cuts and savings through entitlement reforms,’ said Jay Carney, the White House press secretary.” (Peter Baker, “Obama Tilts Tax Debate Away From Spending Cuts,” New York Times, 11/29/12)

President Obama: “I Believe That We Have To Continue To Take A Serious Look At How We Reform Our Entitlements, Because Health Care Costs Continue To Be The Biggest Driver Of Our Deficits.” (President Barack Obama, Remarks By The President At A News Conference, The White House, 11/14/12)

Entitlement Reform “Central” To Containing Spending. “As president-elect, Obama said entitlement reform would be ‘a central part’ of his administration’s attempts to contain federal spending.” (Carrie Budoff Brown, “Obama Dodges ‘Hard Choices’ On Entitlements,”POLITICO, 1/22/13)

Widely Reported That Obama Was Willing To Address Entitlements. “During the debt ceiling fight and the fiscal cliff fight, Obama was (widely reportedly) willing to make cuts to entitlements in exchange for higher taxes from Republicans.”  (Joseph Wiesenthal, “Obama’s Inauguration Speech Dealt A Devastating Blow To Deficit Hawks,” Business Insider, 1/22/13)

And President Obama Has Been Calling For Entitlement Reform For Years:

July 2006: Sen. Barack Obama Said, “We’re Going To Have To Talk About Entitlements …  Difficult To Have That Conversation…” Obama: “The — I think all of us are aware that at some point, in order to get our deficit under control, there are going to be revenue issues that we’ve got to bring up and there are going to be spending issues that we’re going to bring — and we’re going to have to talk about entitlements and we’re going to have to control costs and it is very difficult to have that conversation, particularly at a time when Americans are feeling squeezed and more vulnerable, if they think that the money is being wasted.” (Sen. Barack Obama, U.S. Senator Tom Coburn (R-Ok) Holds A Hearing On S. 2590, The Federal Funding Accountability And Transparency Act Of 2006, 7/19/06)

In 2009, Obama Pledged To Reform Social Security And Medicare. “President-elect Barack Obama pledged yesterday to shape a new Social Security and Medicare ‘bargain’ with the American people, saying that the nation’s long-term economic recovery cannot be attained unless the government finally gets control over its most costly entitlement programs.” (Michael D. Shear, “Obama Pledges Reform Of Social Security, Medicare Programs,” The Washington Post, 1/16/09)

“Obama Pledges Reform of Social Security, Medicare Programs” (in 2009): ”What we have done is kicked this can down the road. We are now at the end of the road and are not in a position to kick it any further,” [President Obama] said. “We have to signal seriousness in this by making sure some of the hard decisions are made under my watch, not someone else’s.” (Michael D. Shear, “Obama Pledges Reform of Social Security, Medicare Programs,” The Washington Post, 1/16/09)

Budgetology: Debt Clock Violation

SHOT: President Obama: “We don’t have an immediate crisis in terms of debt. In fact, for the next ten years, it’s gonna be in a sustainable place.” (President Barack Obama, Interview with George Stephanopoulos, ABC News – Good Morning America, 3/13/13)

CHASER: In its annual Budget and Economic Outlook, the CBO said debt held by the public will be bigger by 2023 than in any year since 1951 and will be at 77 percent of gross domestic product (GDP) by 2023, far above the 40-year average of 39 percent of GDP.” (Tom Curry, “CBO Forecasts Growing Debt Even As Economy Recovers,” NBC News, 2/5/13)

More From The CBO …

CBO: “…[Fe]deral debt held by the public is projected to remain historically high relative to the size of the economy for the next decade.” (Congressional Budget Office, The Budget and Economic Outlook: Fiscal Years 2013-2023, 2/5/13)

 “Serious Negative Consequences” Of High Debt: Lower Wages, Greater Risk Of Fiscal Crisis. “Such high and rising debt would have serious negative consequences: When interest rates rose to more normal levels, federal spending on interest payments would increase substantially. Moreover, because federal borrowing reduces national saving, the capital stock would be smaller and total wages would be lower than they would be if the debt was reduced. In addition, lawmakers would have less flexibility than they might ordinarily to use tax and spending policies to respond to unexpected challenges. Finally, such a large debt would increase the risk of a fiscal crisis, during which investors would lose so much confidence in the government’s ability to manage its budget that the government would be unable to borrow at affordable rates.” (Congressional Budget Office, The Budget and Economic Outlook: Fiscal Years 2013-2023, 2/5/13)

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Spending Daily March 13, 2013: Obama’s Budget Coming Week of April 8, More Than Two Months Late

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Spending Daily | March 13, 2013

Video: “Obama: ‘No,’ My Budget Won’t Be Balanced”
In and ABC News interview, President Obama said his budget would not be balanced. Watch the video from The Washington Free Beacon here.

Obama’s Budget Coming Week of April 8, More Than Two Months Late
Bloomberg reports, “President Barack Obama will send his fiscal 2014 budget to Congress the week of April 8, an administration official said today, more than two months late. The president’s spending blueprint was due on Feb. 4. The administration said last month that the debate over taxes and spending at the end of last year, combined with across-the-board spending cuts that kicked in March 1, would delay its release. … The president has said he’s planning to again seek many of the same proposals for spending and for deficit reduction that were contained in last year’s $3.8 trillion budget, which was never adopted by Congress.”

Poll: Obama Approval Down on Handling of Economy
According to The Washington Post, “The afterglow of President Obama’s reelection and inauguration appears to have vanished as increasingly negative views among Americans about his stewardship of the economy have forced his public approval rating back down to the 50 percent mark, according to a new Washington Post-ABC News poll. In December, just after he won a second term, Obama held an 18-percentage-point advantage over congressional Republicans on the question of whom the public trusted more to deal with the economy. Now, it’s a far more even split — 44 percent to 40 percent, with a slight edge for the president — but the share of those saying they have confidence in ‘neither’ has ticked up into double digits. The poll contains ample evidence of the disillusionment voters feel toward both sides amid a sense of continuing dysfunction in Washington, which since December has been grappling with fiscal crises and deadlines of its own making.”

Republicans, Democrats Present “Clashing Budgets”
The Hill reports, “House Republicans and Senate Democrats unveiled clashing budgets Tuesday that highlight the ideological chasm between the two parties on taxes, spending and the size of government. The plan from Rep. Paul Ryan (R-Wis.), chairman of the House Budget Committee, would slice spending by $5.7 trillion, cut the top tax rate to 25 percent and balance the budget in 10 years. Its Democratic counterpart, from Senate Budget Committee Chairwoman Patty Murray (Wash.), raises nearly $1 trillion in new taxes, adds new stimulus spending and does not project any date at which balance will be reached.”

Budget Comparison: “Apples to Bicycles”
David Nather writes in POLITICO, “Democrats and Republicans have put together their dream budgets — political documents that are more like wish lists than usable road maps for the future of government spending. Both have no chance of becoming law, but they do help explain the impasse over spending and debt in Washington. The two plans — one by Republican Paul Ryan and the other by Democrat Patty Murray — aren’t even apples and oranges. They’re more like apples and bicycles. Ryan’s budget shoots to balance the budget in 10 years by slashing health care spending. Murray’s plan, which Democrats outlined in bare-bones form Tuesday, seeks to lower deficits by raising $1 trillion in new revenues and leaving out big entitlement changes but doesn’t take on balancing the budget.”

Senate Dems Clash With Obama on Entitlements
The Hill reports, “Liberal Democrats challenged President Obama on Tuesday over his willingness to cut Social Security benefits. Sen. Tom Harkin (D-Iowa) said he and Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), among others, challenged Obama on the so-called ‘chained CPI’ — a change in the way Social Security benefits are calculated. Obama has said he is open to chained CPI as part of a ’grand bargain’ that would include spending cuts as well as new revenue. And he didn’t back down from that support during a closed-door meeting with Senate Democrats, despite pushback from Harkin and Sanders. Harkin said the message from Obama was ‘basically, things are open for negotiation’ in pursuit of a grand bargain. ‘The president sort of talked about being willing to make some changes here so we can improve someother things over here’ when Sanders raised the issue, Harkin told reporters. In previous efforts to negotiate a grand bargain with House Republicans, Obama had supported raising the Medicare eligibility age. The White House has since said that Obama would not support that proposal. Harkin said Obama didn’t explicitly rule out raising the Medicare age, but implied that the policy has fallen out of favor. ‘I didn’t hear a commitment, but I spoke about that,’ Harkin said. ‘He didn’t make a commitment, but he seemed to indicate that yes, there are other ways of solving the entitlement problem without doing that.’”

“Obama Tells Democrats They Must Be Open to Entitlement Changes”
Bloomberg reports, “President Barack Obama told Senate Democrats that they should be open to changes in entitlement programs to achieve a long-term budget deal, according to several lawmakers who attended a meeting with him on Capitol Hill today. Iowa Senator Tom Harkin said Obama told Democrats during the 90-minute meeting that he wanted a broad, bipartisan deficit-reduction deal this year. Harkin said Obama rebuffed his demand, joined by Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders, for an assurance that Medicare and Social Security benefits would be remain untouched in any ‘grand bargain’ agreement.”

In Talk With Dems, Obama Stands Firm 
The Hill reports, “Obama stood firm Tuesday when pressed to back away from benefit cuts during the meeting with the Senate Democratic Conference, according to lawmakers who attended. Democrats emerged from the Senate’s Mike Mansfield Room publicly declaring party unity. … ‘Most of the conversation I caught was on Social Security,’ Sen. Chris Murphy (D-Conn.) said, describing the back-and-forth on entitlement reform. ‘He’s been clear in the past that he’s willing to take a look at some aspects of Social Security.’ Some Democrats pressed Obama to back away from benefit cuts and instead support tax increases as the sole solution for prolonging the program’s solvency. Obama had discussed entitlement reform with a dozen Senate Republicans over a private dinner last week. ‘I urged him not to cut Social Security and benefits for disabled veterans,” said Sen. Bernie Sanders (Vt.), an independent who caucuses with Democrats. ‘He is concerned about the long-term solvency of Social Security and so am I. But I think he recognized there are different ways to approach it. You can bring more revenue into the program or you can cut benefits.’”

“Defense officials press Congress for budget flexibility”
Reuters reports, “Senior defense officials said on Tuesday they were doing their best to offset the worst impacts of $46 billion in budget cuts that began this month, but they will have to slash personnel and weapons programs if reductions keep coming in future years. Deputy Defense Secretary Ashton Carter told a conference of industry officials that the Pentagon was facing a ‘double absurdity’ of having to implement across-the-board budget cuts generally seen as bad policy while being funded for last year’s spending levels and priorities. … The department is also being squeezed by financial constraints imposed by the legislative mechanism Congress used to fund the government through March 27. Unable to reach a budget deal, they passed a resolution that extended funding based on last year’s spending and priorities. As a result, the Pentagon has more money for weapons programs than it requested but is facing a multibillion-dollar shortfall for operations and maintenance. Pentagon officials are urging Congress to give them an appropriation that would shift the funding into the right accounts for this year’s priorities.”

Debt Ceiling Crisis Still Ahead After Spending Fight
Roll Call reports, “Conservatives are privately debating how much space to give House leaders to follow through on promises made at their Williamsburg, Va., retreat in January, with a wait-and-see approach embraced by key veterans and a smaller movement of mostly newer lawmakers wanting to push leadership harder. The divide is behind the mixed signals in the past week as Republicans provided a surprisingly unified vote on the continuing resolution followed quickly by bold threats by conservatives to bring down rule votes. The debate has big implications for how Republicans will approach future spending showdowns such as the next debt ceiling increase and shows there are rumblings beneath the surface during a period of relative tranquility for the GOP conference.”

Ryan Budget Includes Defense Spending Caps
The Wall Street Journal reports, “Rep. Paul Ryan proposed a Republican budget blueprint Tuesday that included caps on defense spending, a shift for his party that could provide a point of compromise with Democrats. The House Budget Committee chairman’s proposal marks a significant reversal for the GOP since just last fall. Mitt Romney, the party’s 2012 presidential nominee, who made Mr. Ryan his running mate, campaigned on a plan to markedly increase the Pentagon budget, saying it should represent no less than 4% of gross domestic product. Mr. Ryan’s budget calls for $560.2 billion in defense spending in 2014, roughly $100 billion less than the 4% formula. Over 10 years, he would spend at least $2.3 trillion less on defense than he and Mr. Romney advocated. The defense proposal was a rare development on a day when House Republicans and Senate Democrats displayed deep policy differences as they released portions of their budget proposals for the next fiscal year, which starts in October.”

Feds Under Pressure From Business Groups to Explore Cost of Regulation
The Hill reports, “Federal agencies are under mounting pressure from business groups to run rigorous economic tests before handing down regulations. As the focus in Washington shifts focus from legislation to regulation in President Obama’s second term, the private sector is calling for strengthened requirements on agencies to measure the costs and benefits of new rules. ­ A study issued Tuesday by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, for example, urged regulators to adopt ‘rigorous cost-benefit analysis to arrive at more rational decision-making,’ especially as they consider the hundreds of rules required by the Dodd-Frank financial reform law. ‘This is 400 rules happening at once across 20 agencies,’ David Hirschmann, president of the Chamber’s Center for Capital Markets Competitiveness, said of Dodd-Frank. … But consumer groups argue that the federal government already relies too heavily on the guesswork of economic analysis. They say it is often easier to document costs of new rules than less tangible benefits such as improved quality of life. Flawed economic projections, they argue, are gumming up the works for urgently needed rules to protect public safety and health.Matters could get worse if economic considerations become more firmly embedded into rule-making decisions, they contend.”

Karl Rove: “What Universe Is Nancy Pelosi Living In?”

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On Monday morning, Fox News contributor Karl Rove reacted to comments made by Nancy Pelosi on CNN’s ‘State of the Union’ in which the Democratic leader claimed of President Obama that the commander in chief “has always been very respectful of the views of the Republicans in Congress, their leadership and their membership; he has always tried to accommodate them. The idea that but for that, we would have gotten all these things done is really just not reality.”

Rove’s initial response? “What universe is she living in? He has not respected Republicans from day one,” he said.

“[This is a guy who uses] rhetoric that not only attacks [Republicans'] policies but continually questions their motivations,” he said, adding that Pelosi lives “in a different place” to make such claims.

“It’s fine for a president to disagree with their policies. But the thing this man does, though, is he questions their motivations. He constructs straw arguments about what he claims they’re for, and then demolishes them.”


Pelosi on Raising Medicare Age: “It’s a Scalp” for Republicans, “Not a Solution”

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What a typical response from House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, it’s imposable to negotiate in good faith when the other side doesn’t understand the facts or blatantly makes up their own. The fact is raising medicare’s retirement age will help achieve the Universal Coverage liberals are constantly clamoring for.

House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) says raising the eligibility age for Medicare benefits is just a political “trophy” for Republicans because the idea would not strengthen the program.

“We don’t want to hurt beneficiaries,” Pelosi told CNN’s Candy Crowley on Sunday. “We certainly want to strengthen Medicare, Social Security, Medicaid. We want to make them more fiscally sound. We want to make sure that for the purpose that they have been instituted, they’re honoring the purpose and the taxpayer, and the beneficiaries are getting their money’s worth.”

“The rising cost of health care in our country is the biggest increase to the rising cost of Medicare,” she explained. “So stopping the drastic increase of the cost of health care is important for our whole economy and health care. Especially important when it comes to Medicare is it’s already working — 0.4 percent, the rate of increase, much slower than it had been. And as I said, Medicaid [is] not increasing. Now, we want to do better than that.”

Avik Roy from Forbes helps us sort through these myths:

Myth 1. Age-raising disproportionately harms minorities and the poor

The number one argument you hear from many liberals—and it’s the one most easily refuted—is that raising the retirement age disproportionately harms lower-income seniors, and by extension ethnic minorities, because minorities tend to have lower incomes and lower life expectancies. “Raising the Medicare eligibility age would have a disproportionate impact on minorities,” writes Sarah Kliff in the Washington Post, citing a Health Affairs study from 2003.

But, as Sarah acknowledges, this isn’t 2003, it’s 2012. In the intervening nine years, some important changes have been made to our health-care system: most notably, Obamacare.

Because Obamacare subsidizes health insurance for everyone under 400 percent of the federal poverty level—$60,520 for a two-person household—lower-income seniors would be protected under any increase in the retirement age. In 1998, 46 percent of seniors made less than 400 percent of FPL. In other words, raising the retirement age to 67 is a way of focusing taxpayer resources on those with below-average incomes: what Medicare should have been doing all along.

And it’s important to remember the way Medicare gets cut if you don’t raise the retirement age: by making it harder for seniors to get doctors’ appointments (by reducing reimbursement fees), and by attempting to ration care (through IPAB and other instruments). Those changes actually do affect lower-income seniors, unlike raising the retirement age.

APOTHEFACT CONCLUSION: Raising Medicare’s retirement age increases the progressivity of government health benefits, and protects minorities: the opposite of what opponents contend. Indeed, reducing Medicare spending via Congress’ traditional rationing methods is far more harmful to low-income seniors.

Myth 2. Age-raising increases government health-care costs

The next argument—an especially creative one—is that raising Medicare’s eligibility age will actually increase Medicare’s costs, and also increase costs throughout the system.

Well, no. Put simplistically, raising Medicare’s retirement age will mean that the government will subsidize half of the retirees between 65 and 67, while leaving the wealthier half outside of the Medicare/Medicaid/Obamacare axis. The Congressional Budget Office projects that this would save $148 billion between 2012 and 2021, with even larger savings in future decades.

If you point this out, anti-age-raisers shift to a different argument: that while age-raising might reduce federal spending, it will increase overall health-care spending. The argument goes like this: adding 65-67 year olds to the exchanges will increase average premiums in the exchanges, because under Obamacare’s community rating provision, young people are forced to pay higher premiums to subsidize premiums for old people. In addition, subtracting 65-67 year olds from Medicare will increase average premiums in Medicare, because the Medicare insurance pool will now be older and sicker.

But both these arguments are flawed. As to the exchanges, it’s a bit rich for liberals to argue that raising the retirement age will modestly increase costs, when there are dozens of Obamacare provisions and regulations that dramatically drive up the cost of health insurance—by as much as 85 percent on average. If you want to prevent 65-67 year olds from modestly increasing premiums in the exchanges, all you have to do is repeal community rating. Or, you could repeal Obamacare’s tax on insurance premiums, which adds at least 3.5 percent to the cost of insurance.

As to Medicare, Medicare’s premiums are not determined organically by actuarial considerations, but are instead determined artificially by Congress. While the average per-person expenditure by the government might increase within Medicare if the younger retirees are taken out of the pool, overall Medicare spending would decrease dramatically, which is the important part. While Congress could easily choose to keep Medicare’s premiums constant, it’s important to keep in mind that those premiums are artificially low today.

The final cost-based argument the anti-age-raisers make is that Medicare spends less on health care than private insurance does on a per-person basis, so Medicare is more cost-efficient. No. Medicare artificially underpays hospitals to care for Medicare patients, which leads hospitals to charge private insurers more, a phenomenon known as cost-shifting. Furthermore, because Medicare’s co-pays and deductibles are so low, seniors have no incentive to avoid wasteful or excessive treatment. Medicare is the driver of exploding health costs, not the solution to them.

APOTHEFACT CONCLUSION: Raising Medicare’s retirement age will significantly reduce federal spending, which is the whole point. And it will also help reduce overall health spending, by reducing the scope of Medicare’s uniquely wasteful consumption of health-care services.

Myth 3. Age-raising would throw more seniors onto Medicaid

It’s true that raising Medicare’s retirement age would, by itself, mean that seniors whose income was too low to qualify for Obamacare’s exchanges—below 100 percent of the federal poverty level—would end up on Medicaid. This would, indeed, be a problem, given that Medicaid is terrible insurance that harms the poor at least as much as it helps them. In addition, such a change would expose state governments to higher costs, because states partially fund the Medicaid program.

But there’s an easy fix for this: write a provision into retirement-age change that allows all seniors above the age of 65, and under 400% of FPL, to qualify for the exchanges. That way, not one additional person has to be added to the Medicaid rolls. While this will slightly reduce the deficit savings from raising the retirement age, the trade-off in terms of policy is well worth it.

APOTHEFACT CONCLUSION: A naked increase of the retirement age would put more seniors on Medicaid. But allowing those seniors to enroll in the exchanges entirely solves that problem.

Spending Daily March 11, 2013 – Dems to Obama: Don’t Touch Entitlements

Govenment spending dollars

Spending Daily | March 11, 2013

Some Convinced Entitlement Reform Now Obama’s #1 Priority
The Washington Examiner reports, “President Obama, hoping to make debt reduction part of his legacy, appears focused on striking a grand bargain with Republicans to reform Medicare this year. Medicare’s growing share of the budget and its increasing toll on the expanding debt were the main topic of conversation at an unprecedented dinner meeting last week between Obama andSenate Republicans, who came away convinced that entitlement reform is now the president’s No. 1 priority. And he wants the job done by this summer. … Medicare is the biggest driver of the nation’s debt, Obama told the group, and it’s costing far more than American workers are pumping into the system through paycheck deductions. ‘They all think that Medicare is their money, and to a certain extent it is,’ Obama said, according to Sen. Ron Johnson, R-Wis., who attended the event. ‘But for every dollar they put in, they get three back. The American people don’t understand that.’

Dems to Obama: Don’t Touch Entitlements
POLITICO reports, “President Barack Obama may be thinking about a ‘grand bargain’ to address spending and the federal deficit, but there’s a key constituency he has to persuade to come along. Democrats. The talk of any deal with congressional Republicans — and for now, it’s just that: talk — has liberals worried the White House will give in to changes to safety net programs including Medicare, Medicaid and Social Security. … One hundred and seven of the 200 House Democrats signed a letter to Obama threatening to vote ‘against any and every cut to Medicare, Medicaid or Social Security benefits — including raising the retirement age or cutting the cost of living adjustments that our constituents earned and need.’”

Senate Dems Struggle to Pass Budget by Easter
The Hill reports, “Senate Democrats say they will soon pass their first budget in four years, but it is proving a test. Disputes over tax cuts, spending reductions and entitlement reform all present challenges to Budget Committee Chairwoman Patty Murray (D-Wash.) and Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.). The Democrats’ narrow 12-10 majority on the panel means one defection would mean failure, if Republicans stick together as expected. There is more leeway on the Senate floor because budget resolutions cannot be filibustered and Democrats control 55 seats. Still, the party can afford to lose only five votes before Vice President Biden’s deciding ballot would likely become necessary. … They have signaled that their budget will do more to raise revenue than to cut spending and that it will not end deficits. In a memo, Murray adumbrated the justification for this by noting that Congress has already approved $1.8 trillion in spending cuts since 2010 but only $600 billion in new taxes.”

“Pump Up the Fraud”
The Washington Free Beacon reports, “A politically connected engineering company that received massive stimulus contracts has admitted that workers committed widespread fraud under the encouragement of its executives while working on a major taxpayer-funded nuclear cleanup effort. Employees of CH2M Hill routinely inflated hours worked on the cleanup effort at the Hanford nuclear waste site in Washington state between 1999 and 2008. Company executives sanctioned those violations in order to obtain bonuses that required certain performance benchmarks, according to an agreement between the company and the Justice Department filed in federal court on Friday.”

“Too Much Talk of Taxing”
Judd Gregg editorializes in The Hill, “Many who march in the army of the president say that all they want is to return to the good old days when Bill Clinton rode the range and richpeople paid their fair share of taxes. …  In 2000, the top tax rate was 39.6 percent and there was a 2.9 percent Medicare tax on top of that. Therefore, the stated tax burden on high income Americans and small businesses was 42.5 percent. After the ’fiscal cliff’ tax increase, the top rate is now 39.6 percent and on top of that there is a new 3.8 percent Medicare tax rate forpeople with incomes over $200,000. This means that the top stated rate for taxes is now 43.4 percent — a rate that is higher than that paid in Clintonian times. … The capital gains rate on small businesses and high-income people is also now higher than in the Clinton years.  It is 23.6 percent today as compared with 20 percent in Clinton’s last years. Even if you look at the effective rate, high-income people are paying more today than in the last decade of the last century. The effective rate is 27.6 percent today as compared with 26.4 percent back then. There should be happiness in Obama-land.  But, alas, there is not.  The president and his minions in Congress continue to call for the rich, also known as small business-owners, to pay more. What is the goal here? Obviously, it is not to return to the tax policies of the Clinton years regarding wealthy Americans and small businesses, since we have already done so.”

Are Senate Leaders Road Blocking Deficit Talks?
The Hill reports, “Sen. Tom Coburn (R-Okla.) accused Democratic and Republican Senate leaders of standing in the way of a bipartisan deficit-reduction deal. ‘The Senate’s not nearly as dysfunctional as it’s made out to be, because there’s great relationships in the Senate,’ said Coburn, who is at the center of deficit talks. ‘Our problem in the Senate is the leadership in the Senate, not the members in the Senate.’ He said President Obama, who has tried tocircumvent Republican leaders by reaching out to rank-and-file members in recent days, has a good chance at striking a grand bargain despite widespread skepticism. … Coburn said many lawmakers on both sides of the aisle are eager to forge a compromise and blamed the Democratic and Republican leadership in Congress for impeding their efforts. He said he came away from last week’s meeting hopeful that Obama would begin talking to the public about the need to reform entitlement programs, the biggest drivers of the federal deficit. Coburn said a deal would need to be struck before the start of the 2014 campaign season and indicated his willingness to reduce the deficit by raising new revenues through tax reform in exchange for entitlement reform, a concession Obama has demanded.”

Ryan Claims Budget Will Balance Books in 10 Years 
Bloomberg reports, “House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan is planning to unveil a 2014 budget plan this week that would balance the government’s books in 10 years by limiting the annual growth of spending to 3.4 percent. The budget proposal assumes that Congress would repeal President Barack Obama’s health-care law set to be implemented next year, Ryan said yesterday on ‘Fox News Sunday.’ That assumption depends on the unlikely possibility that the Democrat in the White House and those who control the Senate agree to repeal the president’s signature domestic policy achievement. Ryan, a Wisconsin Republican, said his budget would save $5 trillion over 10 years, the same amount his two previous budget plans had proposed saving by 2040. His party’s vice presidential nominee in 2012, Ryan said new tax revenue of more than $600 billion that Congress and the president agreed to in January will help achieve a balanced budget in 10 years. … ‘Instead of growing spending at 4.9 percent’ annually, ‘we grow spending 3.4 percent’ so ‘the result is a $5 trillion’ cut in the increase of spending over 10 years, he said.”

“Cuts Give Obama Path to Create Leaner Military”
The New York Times reports, “At a time when $46 billion in mandatory budget cuts are causing anxiety at the Pentagon, administration officials see one potential benefit: there may be an opening to argue for deep reductions in programs long in President Obama’s sights, and long resisted by Congress. On the list are not only base closings but also an additional reduction in deployed nuclear weapons and stockpiles and a restructuring of the military medical insurance program that costs more than America spends on all of its diplomacy and foreign aid around the world. Also being considered is yet another scaling back in next-generation warplanes, starting with the F-35, the most expensive weapons program in United States history. None of those programs would go away. But inside the Pentagon, even some senior officers are saying that the reductions, if done smartly, could easily exceed those mandated by sequestration, as the cuts are called, and leave room for the areas where the administration believes more money will be required. These include building drones, developing offensive and defensive cyberweapons and focusing on Special Operations forces.”