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WSWS : News
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America
White House, Congress press plans for major cuts in social
programs
By Joseph Kay
14 October 2005
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Using the cost of Hurricane Katrina reconstruction as a pretext,
Congressional Republicans, backed by the Bush administration,
continue to push for sharp cuts in social programs.
The position of the Bush administration is that the federal
government will play as limited a role as possible in aiding the
evacuees from the hurricane and rebuilding devastated regions.
At the same time, whatever spending is agreed will be balanced
by cuts to programs, such as Medicaid and food stamps, that benefit
the most vulnerable layers of society, including those most severely
affected by the hurricane.
Bush reiterated this position on Tuesday, saying on NBCs
Today program, You see, I dont think Washington
ought to dictate to New Orleans how to rebuild. Bush said
he told New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin and a group of distinguished
New Orleans citizens that the federal government will
support whatever plan that you develop. The point is that it comes
from the local folks.
The talk of local folks running the operation is
intended to convey a definite message: the administration will
not allow the hurricane to alter its policy of gutting social
programs, privatizing public services, deregulating business and
slashing taxes for the wealthy. There is to be no significant
federal commitment to rebuilding New Orleans or addressing the
problems of poverty and the decay of the social infrastructure
laid bare by the hurricane and the governments failure to
respond.
This has been the more or less constant refrain from the administration
since the hurricane struck. Treasury Secretary John Snow made
similar comments at a Senate hearing last week, saying, It
is essential that the federal government play an appropriate role,
but it should avoid taking steps that are excessive. We must tailor
our response appropriately.
Snow told Congress the administration would not guarantee New
Orleans municipal bondsa stand that condemns the city to
bankruptcy. Within days the city announced the layoff of 3,000
municipal workers.
Bush also repeated last week his insistence that Congress
needs to pay for as much of the hurricane relief as possible by
cutting spending. He continued: I will ask them to
make even deeper reductions in the mandatory spending programs
than are already planned. As Congress completes action on the
2006 appropriation bills, I call on members to make real cuts
in non-security spending.
Aside from declaring the military and intelligence agencies
to be off limits as far as spending cuts are concerned, Bush has
remained silent on specific programs to be slashed. This has been
left to Republican members of Congress, working behind the scenes
with the White House.
One of the main proposals has come from Representative Jim
Nussle, the House Budget Committee chairman, who last week suggested
an across-the-board 2 percent cut in all spending bills. This
would yield something on the order of $17 billion from the $843
billion annual budget for discretionary spending.
Nussle insisted that the 2 percent cut would only be the beginning.
This is a down payment, he said. This is not
making that much of a dent in the total amount that will be needed
to deal with all the proposals in their totality for the Gulf.
Entitlement programsin particular, Medicaid, the government
health-care program for the poorare to be cut back through
the separate process of budget reconciliation negotiations. According
to a budget blueprint passed earlier in the fall, Congress is
to cut $35 billion over five years from mandatory spending programs,
including some $10 billion from Medicaid and $600 million from
food stamps. Current proposals advanced in Congress, however,
call for even further cuts, totaling at least $50 billion.
Nussles proposal for an across-the-board cut was largely
for show, since there is no support within Congress for a cut
in appropriations for the Defense Department or the Department
of Homeland Security. Supported by the White House, both Duncan
Hunter, chairman of the House Armed Services Committee, and Peter
King, chairman of the House Homeland Security Committee, have
refused to consider cuts in their programs.
On the other hand, Senator Arlen Specter, chairman of the Labor
Health and Human Services subcommittee, told the Hill newspaper
that he was amenable to cuts in his bill, which would include
most non-mandatory social programs.
A conflict has emerged between the White House and Republican
Senator Charles Grassley over a bill supported by Grassley that
would extend Medicaid benefits to all hurricane victims. The bill
has been stalled in Congress by Republican lawmakers acting at
the urging of the administration.
Aside from short-term emergency assistance to evacuees, the
measures enacted since the hurricane have for the most part provided
handouts to corporations involved in relief and reconstruction.
This includes corporate tax breaks, wage-cutting through the suspension
of the Davis Bacon Act, which requires federally-subsidized construction
companies to pay prevailing wage rates, and the lifting of other
regulations on business. Lucrative no-bid contracts have been
signed with giant corporations with close ties to the administration,
such as Halliburton.
On October 7, the House passed an energy bill which includes
many giveaways to energy companies and oil refiners. Meanwhile,
the administration and Congress have stonewalled calls for investigations
into price-gouging by oil companies, which have raked in huge
profits from soaring gasoline prices in the aftermath of Katrina.
Hurricane Katrina laid bare the enormous level of social inequality
in the United States. The devastation of New Orleans was a consequence
not primarily of natural causes, but rather decades of right-wing
policies, in which questions of social planning, social infrastructure
and public needs have been increasingly subordinated to the drive
for profit and private wealth accumulation.
Far from changing course, the American ruling elite is using
the hurricane as a pretext to deepen the very policies that led
to the disaster.
An October 11 article in the New York Times (Liberal
Hopes Ebb in Post-Storm Poverty Debate) reported the concern
of various Democratic Party-oriented advocacy groups. It quoted
Robert Greenstein, director of the Center on Budget and Policy
Priorities, as noting, Weve gone from a situation
in which we might have a long-overdue debate on deep poverty to
the possibility, perhaps even the likelihood that low-income people
will be asked to bear the costs. I would find it unimaginable
if it wasnt actually happening.
If the administration is able to operate in such an extraordinarily
brazen manner, it is due first and foremost to the absence of
any serious opposition from the Democratic Party. There have been
no calls from the Democratic Party leadership for the type of
public works projects that would be required to seriously address
the level of rebuilding needed to support the approximately 1
million evacuees. Not only have there been no serious demands
for the provision of housing, health care or jobs for those devastated
by the hurricane, no prominent Democrats have even called for
rescinding Bushs $1 trillion-dollar-plus tax cuts for the
wealthy.
There is, in fact, no significant constituency within the Democratic
Party officialdom for even a modest return to the social reform
policies with which the party was associated from the 1930s to
the 1960s. For a quarter century, the Democratic Party has ever
more openly embraced the right-wing, free market policies
of the Republicans. This is because the Democrats, no less than
the Republicans, uphold the basic interests of the American ruling
class.
Despite the Democratic Partys threadbare claim to be
a party of the people, the social layers upon which
it is primarily basedsections of the financial elite and
the most privileged sections of the middle classhave shared
in the general enrichment of the top echelons of American society
at the expense of the broad mass of the population. They have
a direct economic stake in continuing the policies of unbridled
capitalism and social reaction that have swelled their stock portfolios
and bank accounts.
See Also:
Videotaped beating in New Orleansthe
ugly face of police repression
[13 October 2005]
Restrictive bankruptcy bill to remain
in place for Hurricane Katrina victims
[8 October 2005]
New Orleans lays off half its workforce
[6 October 2005]
US housing official: rebuilt New Orleans
will have fewer poor blacks
[4 October 2005]
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