Quite a few media outlets are falling for the campaign's cock-and-bull story, but not Politico:
With Republicans demanding more budget discipline, President Barack Obama rolled out a new regimen of spending cuts Thursday, promising nearly $17 billion in savings next year – much of it at the expense of vested interests often allied with his critics.
Democrats will feel some bite as well, but the Republican tilt is stronger from military contractors to oil and nuclear interests, bankers, wealthy farmers and Dick Cheney's old home state of Wyoming.
About half the $17 billion will come from defense, much through the termination of billions in dollars of major aircraft programs. But other targets include oil and gas research in the Energy Department, a nuclear power demonstration program, and federal abandoned mine payments to Western coal states. With Republican Ted Stevens now gone from the Senate, his Alaska programs make for easy picking, and a proposed cut in subsidies for farmers appears to have been altered since February to now hit couples with annual sales over $1 million.
White House Budget Director Peter Orszag said the decisions were "evidence based" and not ideological. Indeed, a West Virginia highway corridor favored by a Democratic elder, Sen. Robert Byrd, is among the targets, and the administration would do away advanced payments to lower-income, working-class families who qualify for the Earned Income Tax Credit.
Ah yes, Byrd. But West Virginia is a state the Democrats haven't won in a presidential election since 1996.
Big deal.
Technorati tags: politics Democrats Republican Barack Obama Obama
What? Nothing about the shots fired at Tony Peraica's Riverside home yet?
ReplyDeleteYou must be busy today, John. I thought for sure you'd have that up by now.
http://tinyurl.com/d9ontt
I love the term "controversial" as applied here. Of course, to the media, it's just a synonym for "Republican."
Here's an example of a budget cut now.
ReplyDeleteArticle"Its actions led to 929 convictions of corrupt union officials and to the recovery of more than $93 million on behalf of union members. Yet the Obama administration has proposed slashing its budget from $45 million in 2009 to $41 million in 2010, citing an insufficient "workload" for the office."
The message to crooked union bosses by the Obama administration is being delivered loudly and clearly: we've got your back.
I was pretty busy Mr. R., but I was waiting for the police statement on Peraica.
ReplyDeleteNot that I didn't believe Tony, but a cop saying so makes the story stronger.