Bush
takes Democrats to task on budget bills
WASHINGTON
(AP) -- President Bush accused Democratic lawmakers on Saturday of being unable
to live up to their duties, citing Congress' inability to pass legislation to
fund the federal government.
"Democrats
are failing in their responsibility to make tough decisions and spend the
people's money wisely," Bush said in his weekly radio address. "This
moment is a test."
The White
House has said the failure of a broad immigration overhaul was proof that
Democratic-controlled Capitol Hill cannot take on major issues. "We saw
this with immigration, and we're seeing it with some other issues where
Congress is having an inability to take on major challenges," said
spokesman Tony Fratto.
The main
reason the immigration measure died, however, was staunch opposition from
Bush's own base -- conservatives. The president could not turn around members
of his own party despite weeks of intense effort.
The
immigration bill was the top item on Bush's domestic agenda. With its demise,
Bush was left to focus on the annual appropriations process and reining in
federal spending.
Twelve
annual spending bills dole out about one-third of the federal budget. They must
be passed each year by Congress, before the October 1 start of the new fiscal
year, but lawmakers began considering this year's batch just in mid-June. The
House has passed half and the full Senate has not yet taken up any.
"Democrats
have a chance to prove they are for open and transparent government by working
to complete each spending bill independently and on time," Bush said.
"I urge Democrats in Congress to step forward now and pass these bills one
at a time. "
Democratic
leaders say they are behind because an emergency spending measure funding the
war in Iraq came first. They also had to pass an omnibus measure cleaning up
last year's appropriations mess.
Then, the
Republicans who then controlled Congress failed to pass into law a single
spending bill for domestic agencies save the Homeland Security Department -- a
situation that brought little complaint from Bush.
With the
Senate and House now in Democratic hands, this year's bills are producing
skirmishes with the White House that also are causing delays. Almost every
domestic bill already has attracted a veto threat because it exceeds Bush's
proposed budget in certain areas.
All told,
Democrats plan spending increases for annual agency budgets of about $23
billion above the White House budget request. Bush put it in terms of a
five-year outlook, and said their budget plan would be $205 billion bigger than
his over that period, and would include "the largest tax increase in
history" by allowing some of his tax cuts to expire as planned.
The
president said Democrats are embracing "the failed tax-and-spend policies
of the past." Republican lawmakers have pledged to support him and sustain
any vetoes.
"No
nation has ever taxed and spent its way to prosperity," Bush said.
"And I have made it clear that I will veto any attempt to take America
down this road."
The president
also applauded a new jobs report, which showed employers adding 132,000 jobs,
paychecks growing solidly and the unemployment rate staying at a low 4.5
percent in June.
Bush said
the evidence that the once listless economy is regaining energy is a result of
his insistence on lowering taxes and spending.
"Democratic
leaders in Congress want to take our country down a different track," he
said.
Reference:
http://www.cnn.com/2007/POLITICS/07/07/bush.radio.ap/index.html