The President Needs Line-item Veto Authority

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Taxpayers are cheated when lawmakers sneak "stealth" funding into bills that are about other topics. It seems obvious that cheaters know it's hard to even have time to read many long bills. If they had not abused the system, the line item veto would not seem to be a remedy. We need straigtforward lawmakers, not tricksters wno hope 'Nobody notices where I sneaked that road to my mining claim in Utah into my bill about textbooks for Salt Lake City schools," etc.

aura dawn veirs of CA 6:02PM July 05, 2010

I cant understand a line item veto trust is not something this president has earned. SEnd all back they can take it out or override him with enough votes. Thats how it suppose to work. This President has grown govt. Added entitlments at a financialy hard time for the country. adding to the deficit.

Also I read this comment by steve of il. thats a real American for you Huffington post get real If she likes Socialism so much maybe Ariana should go back to her home country.

As far taxing being very low dont compare the US to europe its even cutting its budgets to survive and who wants to be like greece you idiots.l

jerry of NY 10:08AM June 30, 2010

Hunter, I had you pegged as a thoughtless right winger who blindly supports whatever right wing spin Rush and Co. pollute the airwaves with at any given time.

steve of IL 4:46PM June 27, 2010

Please stop with your hollier than now attitude with your liberal/progressive links. If you can't see Obama is expanding the power and reach of the goverment , not to mention the goverment payroll, there's no sense in talking.

That's right, I have no stinking links, I know what I see and have alot of common sense. Numbers, polls and opinions can say what you want them to.

Hunter of WI 10:11PM June 25, 2010

Both federal tax revenues as a share of GDP as the smallest in post-WWII history. According to OMB estimates, federal revenues and total budget outlays as a share of GDP reached an historic post-war peak in 1945 of roughly 20% and 42% respectively. By 2009 federal tax revenues reached a post war low of 14.8% of GDP. Federal budget outlays are about 25% of GDP mostly because of declines in growth due to the recession not because spending is unusually high as a share of the economy. During Reagan's two terms, federal tax receipts averaged over 18% of GDP with total federal budget outlays averaging about 22.5% of GDP and federal deficits averaging 4.5% a year; this record is close to Obama's despite the fact that there is a much steeper recession now that in the early 1980s.

Obama's projected deficits for 2009 and 2010 as a share of GDP average about 10% a year because of the severity of the recession and the fact that Bush left him with a $1.3 trillion deficit for 2009. The anticipated growth is expected to reduce federal deficits as a share of GDP to 8.3% in 2011 when the economy is expected to sharply turn around and 5.1% in 2012. For the following three years, the OMB projects a return to normal levels of federal deficits as a share GDP averaging exactly 4% a year which is just slightly more than the historic average.

http://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/budget/Historicals/

The point is that currently the average effective rate of taxation is very low Borrowing rather than taxing is the largest source of revenue. This is fine so long as interest rates and inflation remain low. There is no cause to worry about the deficit. The savings rate is high meaning that the government is spending what the private sector is saving in the form of treasury bonds. There is high unemployment and low capacity utilization which means that only fiscal stimulus, at this time of a slack economy and low consumer borrowing and spending, can stimulate economic growth.

Paul Krugman explains;

"You know, first thing to say is people are putting their money where their mouth is, which is the bond market. Things were fine. You know, the U.S. government is able to borrow long-term at 3.3 percent interest rate. So, obviously, you know, the market is not convinced. Now, the market has been wrong. But, then if you do the arithmetic, these numbers look huge. The American economy is huge. The debt burden, even after five years, is going to be, a share of GDP, well below levels that lots of industrial countries have reached in the past, including ourselves after World War II, when we were able to handle that just fine. [...] we're now paying 1.2 percent real interest rate on federal debt. Even if you add 50 percent of GDP in debt, which I don't think is going to happen, that's still only a fraction of a percent of GDP in additional debt service costs."

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2009/11/30/krugman-deficit-hawks-try_n_373976.html

The deficit hawks have it wrong.

steve of IL 9:34PM June 24, 2010

How about if he just quits spending and expanding goverment.. Almost ALL of his spending is either wastefull or political paybacks.

I thought he promised to end earmarks anyway, oh yeah, that was along with all his other broken promises.

Don't give this clown anymore power than he already has, he will do no more than use it to advance his progressive agenda !!!

Hunter of WI 2:18PM June 22, 2010

I think it would effectively end earmark abuse by certain Dems and Repubs. Additionally, it would cause certain legislators to withdraw support for trash legislation when they knew their earmarks would get deleated by the President.

I prefer that Congress, rather than the President, show responsibility and fiscal discipline, but obviously, their cummulative track record indicates an abysmal failure to do otherwise.

David of ID 5:38PM June 21, 2010

Giving Obama a line item veto would be the same as giving a banker check writing access to your bank account. Bad idea.... He is already abusing the power he has, why give him more?

S Alton of VA 4:11PM June 21, 2010

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