STATEMENT OF ADMINISTRATION POLICY
H.R. 5652 – Sequester Replacement Reconciliation Act of 2012
(Rep. Ryan, R-WI)
The Administration strongly opposes H.R. 5652,
the "Sequester Replacement Reconciliation Act of 2012." The
bill's unbalanced provisions fail the test of fairness and shared
responsibility. At the same time as the House is advancing tax cuts that
benefit the most fortunate Americans, H.R. 5652 would impose deep budget
cuts that cost jobs and hurt middle class and vulnerable Americans – especially
seniors, veterans, and children.
The sequester included in the bipartisan Budget
Control Act of 2011 (BCA) included mutually disagreeable cuts to both defense
and non-defense funding. These cuts would have destructive effects on
national security; on important domestic investments such as education,
research and development, and rebuilding the Nation's crumbling infrastructure;
and on core government programs from air traffic control to law
enforcement. The threat of these destructive cuts under the BCA was
intended to be a mechanism to force action by the Congress on deficit
reduction.
The President has made clear that the Congress
can and must act to avoid the
sweeping impacts of the sequester by passing a balanced deficit reduction
package. Last fall, the Administration provided a blueprint for the
Congress to do so. And in his 2013 Budget, the President proposed a
comprehensive balanced deficit reduction package that would ensure the Nation
lives within its means and, including legislation signed into law last year,
reduces the deficit by $4 trillion while supporting job creation and long-term
economic growth. This package would achieve more than enough deficit
reduction to avoid the sequester.
In contrast, the approach advanced in this bill
only addresses a portion of the pending sequester, and does so in a way that
imposes far greater cuts than the sequester would entail. The bill would
break the agreement on discretionary spending made in last summer's budget
agreement; advancing the House Budget Resolution's approach to increase defense
spending and reduce non-defense spending relative to the levels agreed to in
the BCA. Moreover, it would do nothing to address the reductions in
discretionary spending and sequesters in mandatory programs after 2013.
The bill relies entirely on spending cuts that impose a particular burden on
the middle-class and the most vulnerable among us, while doing nothing to raise
revenue from the most affluent.
Rather than pursuing a comprehensive, balanced
deficit reduction package to replace the sequester, H.R. 5652 undermines the
intent of the BCA to bring both sides to compromise by proposing a short-term,
one-sided solution. This
approach sharply undermines critical domestic priorities, such as efforts to
prevent hunger and support low-income families and communities; to expand
health care access and implement the Affordable Care Act; to protect consumers
and implement the Wall Street Reform Act; and to support homeowners struggling
to stay in their homes. The
Administration strongly opposes
both the principles of this approach and specific legislative proposals included
in the bill. If the
President is presented with H.R. 5652, his senior advisors would recommend that
he veto the bill.
No comments:
Post a Comment