People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol.
XXXII
No. 07 February 17, 2008 |
FROM FRATERNAL PRESS
Bush Budget Proposal: Feed The Pentagon, Starve The People
PRESIDENT Bush proposed a record 3.1 trillion dollars budget on February 4 that hands a whopping 515 billion dollars to the military and slashes health care for seniors and other human needs programmes.
Opposition is boiling over in Congress, among the Democratic presidential candidates, seniors and students and in unions.
Bush's
budget for the next fiscal year is the first in US history to top 3
trillion dollars.
The proposal would hobble a new administration
with what many consider the most disastrous parts of the Bush agenda:
increasing Iraq war spending, expanding tax cuts for the rich,
slashing both Social Security and Medicare and racking up an
additional 407 billion dollars deficit for fiscal 2009.
"This
budget is fiscally irresponsible and highly deceptive, hiding the
costs of the war in Iraq while increasing our skyrocketing debt,"
said the Senate majority leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.). "President
Bush's fiscal policies are the worst in our nation's history —
he has turned record surpluses into record deficits — and this
budget is more of the same."
Observers note that Bush's
budget assumes a 3 percent increase in gross domestic product this
year, a rate that is unlikely if the economy continues to slow down
as it has in recent months.
In addition to this budget proposal, bloated with military spending, Bush also plans to separately request another 70 billion dollars for the Iraq war, on top of his earlier demand, not yet approved by Congress, for 102 billion dollars more for that war.
Meanwhile, his budget would slash Medicare, which serves 44 million seniors and disabled people, by 178 billion dollars over five years. Hospitals and other providers would be cut the most, with private insurance plans favoured by the administration receiving few if any cuts.
The scale of the Medicare reductions would cause many hospitals to close, and increase the number of doctors opting out of the plan. These cuts come on top of already scheduled cuts in Medicare fees to doctors.
The
Bush budget also calls for a 7 percent cut in funding for the Centres
for Disease Control and Prevention. It cuts 50 billion dollars from
151 social programmes including grants to states for technical
education, health and counselling programmes, drug and alcohol abuse
programs, health services for the poor and scholarship programmes.
Not to worry, though. Bush told Congress that he was saving
taxpayer money by e-mailing the budget to House and Senate members
and they could buy printed copies for 200 dollars a piece. The move
was unlikely to impress lawmakers of either party.
On the campaign trail, Democrats are hitting the Bush budget hard, arguing that urgent domestic needs — from children's health care to expanded spending on highways and other infrastructure — are going unmet because of the costs of the Iraq war.
"We
are spending 9 billion to 10 billion dollars every month in Iraq,"
Democratic presidential hopeful Barack Obama said. "That's money
that could be going to lay broadband lines in rural communities and
to rebuilding our schools."
AFL-CIO President John Sweeney
assailed Bush's proposal, and called for "putting Americans to
work directly in construction and repair projects" as an "obvious
response to the rising unemployment."
"Unlike tax rebates," Sweeney said in a statement, "all of this would be spent to increase domestic economic activity, none would be spent on imports, and none would be saved. There is a backlog of at least 100 billion dollars in the needed repairs to schools. There are 6,000 bridges that have been declared unsafe, and many of these projects are ready for work to begin immediately."
Sweeney called on Congress to provide 40 billion dollars for public investment in infrastructure, including school, bridge and sewage treatment repair.
Several
labour unions and progressive groups are running TV ads targeting GOP
lawmakers for voting against efforts to expand health care for
children. One ad by USAction says, "Health care for 1.7 million
kids costs the same as just one week in Iraq. But Republicans in the
Congress helped President Bush to block the programme's extension."
"An economic downturn is not the time for drastically reducing
investment in health care, education and job training," House
Majority Leader Steny Hoyer, a Maryland Democrat, said in a
statement.
The AFL-CIO is addressing this concern in its long-range proposals to stimulate the economy. The labour backed plan calls for an end to wage stagnation, which it describes as an underlying cause of current economic weakness. "Long-term solutions for this," Sweeney says, "include fixing our broken labour laws so that workers who want to form a union can bargain with their employers for better wages and benefits."
--- People's Weekly World (US), February 7