STATEMENT OF ADMINISTRATION POLICY
H.R. 3442 – Debt Management and Fiscal Responsibility Act of 2015
(Rep. Marchant, R-TX, and 35 cosponsors)
The
Administration strongly opposes H.R. 3442, the Debt Management and
Fiscal Responsibility Act of 2015, which would impose needless,
redundant burdens on the U.S. Department of the Treasury in the event
that the Congress allows the Nation to come close to reaching the
statutory debt limit.
The
Administration already provides the information requested in H.R. 3442
in the form of the President's Budget, the Mid-Session Review, the Daily
Treasury Statement, the Monthly Treasury Statement, the Monthly
Statement of Public Debt, the Schedule of Federal Debt, and the
Financial Report of the United States Government. All of these reports
are publicly available on the Internet. In addition, Administration
officials regularly make themselves available to testify before the
Congress on the President's fiscal proposals and, in recent years, the
Treasury Secretary has also gone before the Congress to urge it to
fulfill its responsibility to raise the debt limit and underscore the
potentially catastrophic consequences of failing to do so. H.R. 3442
would provide no additional information for the Congress as it exercises
its responsibility to raise the debt limit when necessary to avoid
defaulting on the Nation's obligations. The bill's reporting
requirements are duplicative and redundant.
The
Congress's decisions on spending and revenue policies (subject to the
presidential veto) ultimately determine the level of debt and when the
debt limit is reached. It is the Congress's responsibility to raise the
debt limit when needed to enable Treasury to meet obligations already
incurred pursuant to legislation enacted by the Congress. As the
Administration has emphasized, the Congress should exercise that
responsibility judiciously to avoid putting the Nation's
creditworthiness at risk and endangering the economy.
If the President were presented with H.R. 3442, his senior advisors would recommend he veto the bill.
H.R. 3293 – Scientific Research in the National Interest Act
(Rep. Smith, R-TX, and 22 cosponsors)
The Administration strongly opposes House passage of H.R. 3293, the Scientific Research in the National Interest Act.
The
scientific‑peer‑based, merit‑review process that the National Science
Foundation (NSF) has in place is widely regarded as the "gold standard"
for funding scientific research. In the interest of transparency and
accountability, moreover, the NSF publishes online the abstracts of
every one of the more than 10,000 research grants it makes every year.
Contrary
to its stated purpose, H.R. 3293 would add nothing to accountability in
Federal funding for scientific research, while needlessly adding to
bureaucratic burdens and overhead at the NSF. And, far from promoting
the progress of science in the United States, it would replace the
clarity of the National Science Foundation Act of 1950 with confusing
language that could cast a shadow over the value of basic research
which, by its nature, will have outcomes with contributions to national
interests other than the progress of science which cannot be predicted
in advance.
If the President were presented with H.R. 3293, his senior advisors would recommend that he veto the bill.
Source: The Executive Office of the President, Office off Management and Budget
1 comment:
Great article! a good/simple breakdown of HR 3293 on thepoliticalsimplifier.com
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