TPMDC

Three Years Running, House Republicans Pass Radical Budget

House Budget Committee Chairman Rep. Paul Ryan, R-Wis. leaves a Republican caucus on Capitol Hill in Washington on January 1, 2013.

For the third year in a row House Republicans coalesced around a budget blueprint that calls for converting Medicare into a subsidized private insurance market; dramatically slashing all manner of domestic spending and devolving programs for the poor like Medicaid and food stamps to the states.

The final vote was 221-207, with 10 Republicans joining unified House Democrats in opposition. One Republican and three Democrats did not vote. The development assures that the GOP’s controversial tax and spending policies will once again dominate campaign season, when midterm election campaigns begin in earnest later this year.

Though the budget lacks legislative force, it does set overall limits on domestic and defense spending, and in that regard Republicans are calling for even deeper cuts to domestic programs, in order to increase Pentagon spending.

The budget calls for replacing the current progressive tax rate structure with two brackets, dramatically lowering the top rate from 39.6 to 25 percent, and constituting a massive tax cut for high income earners. Though the budget’s overall tax reforms are intended to be revenue neutral, the document is silent on how Congress would recoup the lost revenue. Republicans have called for limiting or eliminating tax expenditures to fill that budget hole, but outside experts say the rate cuts are so large that the distributional consequences of the overall reforms would likely amount to an effective tax increase on middle income earners.

Thursday’s vote comes just as the Senate is kicking off its own budget debate, which will culminate in an unlimited amendment process called votearama.

The Senate Democratic budget calls for increasing taxes by $975 billion, via curbing tax expenditures, and cutting spending by $975 billion. The savings would be used both to turn off sequestration, to reduce the deficit, and to finance a modest, near-term jobs program.

If both budgets pass, House and Senate members could theoretically combine them into one. But the differences between the two documents are so vast that it will be extraordinarily difficult for the parties to reconcile them.

Brian Beutler

Brian Beutler is TPM's senior congressional reporter. Since 2009, he's led coverage of health care reform, Wall Street reform, taxes, the GOP budget, the government shutdown fight, and the debt limit fight. He can be reached at brian@talkingpointsmemo.com.

Top Stories From TPM

Oklahoma GOP Sen. Tom Coburn Will Seek To Offset Tornado Aid

Ohio Republicans Push Law To Penalize Colleges For Helping Students Vote

Secret Service Looking Into Radio Host’s Graphic Violent Comments About Obama, Hillary Clinton

VA GOP's Attorney General Nominee Wanted Women To Report Miscarriages To Police Or Face Jail Time

The NRA Thinks These Are The ‘Coolest Gun Movies’ Ever

What Republicans Already Knew About The White House Benghazi Emails

Disqus Conversations

Click here to read the Disqus Commenting FAQ.

Editor & Publisher

Josh Marshall

Managing Editor

David Kurtz

Associate Editor

Nick Martin

Assistant Editor

Igor Bobic

Reporters

Brian Beutler

Sahil Kapur

Eric Lach

Hunter Walker

Frontpage Editor

Zoë Schlanger

News Writers

Tom Kludt

Video Editor

Michael Lester

General Manager & General Counsel

Millet Israeli

VP, Ad Sales

Bruce Ellerstein

Associate Publisher

Kyle Leighton

Assistant To The Publisher

Joe Ragazzo

Designer/Developer

Matthew Wozniak

Design Associate

Christopher O’Driscoll