HON. RON PAUL OF TEXAS
BEFORE THE US HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
March 25, 2004
Oppose the Spendthrift 2005 Federal Budget Resolution
2004 Ron Paul 24:1
Mr. Speaker, I once again find myself compelled to vote against the annual
budget resolution (HConRes 393) for a very simple reason: it makes
government
bigger.
Like many of my Republican
colleagues who curiously voted for today’s enormous budget, I campaign
on a
simple promise that I will work to make government smaller.
This means I cannot vote for any budget that increases spending
over
previous years.
In fact, I would
have a hard time voting for any budget that did not slash federal
spending by at
least 25%, a feat that becomes less unthinkable when we remember that
the
federal budget in 1990 was less than half what it is today.
Did anyone really think the federal government was uncomfortably
small
just 14 years ago?
Hardly.
It once took more than 100 years for the federal budget to
double, now it
takes less than a decade.
We need
to end the phony rhetoric about “priorities” and recognize federal
spending
as the runaway freight train that it is.
A
federal government that spends 2.4 trillion dollars in one year and
consumes
roughly one-third of the nation’s GDP is far too large.
2004 Ron Paul 24:2
Neither political party wants to address the fundamental
yet unspoken issue lurking beneath any budget debate: What is the
proper role
for government in our society?
Are
these ever-growing social services and defense expenditures really
proper in a
free country?
We need to understand
that the more government spends, the more freedom is lost.
Instead of simply debating spending levels, we ought to be
debating whether the departments, agencies, and programs funded by the
budget
should exist at all.
My Republican
colleagues especially ought to know this.
Unfortunately,
however, the GOP has decided to abandon principle and pander to the
entitlements
crowd.
But this approach will
backfire, because Democrats will always offer to spend even more than
Republicans.
When Republicans offer
to spend $500 billion on Medicare, Democrats will offer $600 billion.
Why not?
It’s all funny
money anyway, and it helps them get reelected.
2004 Ron Paul 24:3
I object strenuously to the term “baseline budget.”
In Washington, this means that the previous year’s spending
levels
represent only a baseline starting point.
Both
parties accept that each new budget will spend more than the last, the
only
issue being how much more.
If
Republicans offer a budget that grows federal spending by 3%, while
Democrats
seek 6% growth, Republicans trumpet that they are the party of smaller
government! But expanding the government slower than some would like is
not the
same as reducing it.
2004 Ron Paul 24:4
Furthermore, today’s budget debate further entrenches the
phony concept of discretionary versus nondiscretionary spending.
An increasing percentage of the annual federal budget is
categorized as
“nondiscretionary” entitlement spending, meaning Congress ostensibly
has no
choice whether to fund certain programs.
In
fact, roughly two-thirds of the fiscal year 2005 budget is consumed by
nondiscretionary spending.
When
Congress has no say over how two-thirds of the federal budget is spent,
the
American people effectively have no say either.
Why in the world should the American people be forced to spend
1.5
trillion dollars funding programs that cannot even be reviewed at
budget time?
The very concept of nondiscretionary spending is a
big-government
statist’s dream, because it assumes that we as a society simply have
accepted
that most of the federal leviathan must be funded as a matter of course.
NO program or agency should be considered sacred, and no funding
should
be considered inevitable.
2004 Ron Paul 24:5
The assertion that this budget will reduce taxes is
nonsense.
Budget bills do not
change the tax laws one bit.
Congress
can pass this budget today and raise taxes tomorrow- budget and tax
bills are
completely separate and originate from different committees.
The budget may make revenue projections based
on tax cuts,
but the truth is that Congress has no idea what federal revenues will
be in any
future year.
Similarly, the deficit
reduction supposedly contained in the budget is illusory.
The federal government always spends more in future years than
originally
projected, and always runs single-year deficits when one factors in
raids on
funds supposedly earmarked for Social Security.
The notion that today’s budget will impose fiscal restraint on
Congress
in the future is laughable- Congress will vote for new budgets every
year
without the slightest regard for what we do today.
2004 Ron Paul 24:6
Mr. Speaker, my colleagues have discussed the details of
this budget ad nauseam.
The
increases in domestic, foreign, and military spending would not be
needed if
Congress stopped trying to build an empire abroad and a nanny state at
home.
Our interventionist foreign policy and growing entitlement
society will
bankrupt this nation if we do not change the way we think about the
proper role
of the federal government.