Manchin Puts the Brakes on Democrat Spending Plans
3 Sep 2021
STEVE MOORE: I think what youโve got is a problem with policy right now where, Bill, we are paying people โ continue to pay people โ to stay unemployed. Not just through unemployment benefits, expanded food stamps, rental assistance, $300-a-month-per-child benefits. All the free cash to people encouraging them not to work and then weโre taxing people who do work. I believe we would have 5 million more Americans working today, Austan, if we had cut the payroll tax rather than expanded unemployment benefits. You want to give people an incentive to go back to work. Weโre giving people incentive to stay on the sidelines.
BUCK: Steve Moore droppinโ some truth bombs there, as heโs often fond of doing on economic issues. Welcome back to the Clay Travis and Buck Sexton Show. This is Buck, and weโre headed for a number of big political fights. Well, thatโs probably true at any point in time. But Iโve been talking about the Supreme Court battle looming over Roe and abortion. But letโs get into something that is more imminent for a moment here, and that is what happens with the entirety of the Biden agenda.
And itโs pretty much the whole thing is riding on this $3.5 trillion Democrat spending wish list of all sorts of stuff. Oh, thereโs green new deal stuff, and thereโs massive social spending. This is the Biden stealth-socialism plan. Thatโs what the $3.5 trillion is. Now, heโs not writing it. He doesnโt even really know what itโs it. He just knows (impression) โThatโs where Iโm supposed to sign? All right.โ Thatโs what heโs going to do.
โHey, man, Iโm here! Iโmโฆ Iโmโฆ Amtrak Joe. Iโm awake. You thought I was nappinโ, didnโt ya?โ But the truth is, heโs going to sign whatever they put in front of him, so it doesnโt really matter whatโs in it as far as Joe Biden is concerned. As long as Chuck Schumer and Nancy Pelosi are smiling, he knows theyโre gonna give him a cookie and thatโs that. But Biden was going all-in this morning on the $3.5 trillion spending plan, and they have to get this thing done by September 15th.
Because thatโs the deadline for committees to finish the drafting of the legislation. Then Democrats are going to have to go and push all out to get this thing through, on their side. Remember, we got a 50-50 Senate. So they have a de facto majority, thanks to Kamala. By the way, where is Kamala? Anybody? Anybody seen Kamala these days? I havenโt really heard much about our vice president.
I havenโt really heard much about her. Whatโsโฆ? I thought she was in a charge of the border. Oh, the border last month was over 200,000 illegals crossing and itโs as bad as itโs ever been. So maybe we wonโt hear from Kamala. Itโs interesting. Kamalaโs numbers when it comes to approval and likability are worse than Joeโs โ and Joeโs are the worst that theyโve been in a very long time.
So I guess thatโs really not all that surprising. But, anyway, because of Kamala, 50-50 means the Democrats can still get it through with a tie-breaking vote of the president. But even a Democrat majority in the House, itโs only 220 to 212. Eight seats in the House of Representatives. So if they just lose four, they donโt get this thing through. So this is going to be on a razor-thin margin.
And when you look at the $3.5 trillion that they want to spend, theyโre acting as though they have a mandate. Theyโre acting as though we didnโt have a very close and very contested โ to put it mildly โ presidential election outcome. Theyโre acting like we donโt have 50-50 in the Senate and close to it in the House, and that the American people are crying out for some kind of a transformation-through-spending fiat, using the parliamentary trick essentially of budget reconciliation.
They didnโt just get some big mandate. They didnโt just have everyone say, โOh, the Trump economy was horrible.โ Now theyโve got 60 Senate seats, and theyโve got a 30-seat majority in the House or something. No, thatโs not what happened at all. In fact, it was prettyโฆ For a pandemic year, it was a weak showing for Democrats in the House and in the Senate โ a weak showing, indeed.
We should have won one of two Senate seats in Georgia, my fellow Republicans. But thatโs a conversationโฆ We could have some whisky and cry about that another day. That was pretty depressing. But there is hope on this. I would like to send you off into your weekend with hope, and this was just published in the Wall Street Journal yesterday:
โWhy I Wonโt Support Spending Another $3.5 Trillion โ Amid inflation, debt and the inevitability of future crises, Congress needs to take a strategic pause,โ by โ yes, thatโs right โ good old Joe Manchin. Joe Manchin is like, โYou know what? I donโt know if I want to go along with this full-on socialism thing.โ First of all, Iโm still kind of surprised that Manchin hasnโt switched parties.
But remember, he also was a critical vote in favor of confirming Kavanaugh. But I know that internally the polls in West Virginia showed a huge support for Kavanaugh. I donโt think people realized that now-Supreme Court Justice Kavanaugh was just getting ambushed with lies. They didnโt know that in some of the blue states, of course, because it wasnโt about the reality.
But anyway, Manchin has held the line against the true lunacy of his party on occasion, and hereโs what he says. Now, writes โ and of course, the staffโฆ Iโm not pointing this outโฆ Everyoneโs staff in the Senate is actually writing their editorial, and this is just like they write their speeches. Anyway, hereโs whatโs in the article under his name in the Wall Street Journal.
โI, for one, wonโt support a $3.5 trillion bill, or anywhere near that level of additional spending, without greater clarity about why Congress chooses to ignore the serious effects inflation and debt have on existing government programs. This is even more important now as the Social Security and Medicare Trustees have sounded the alarm that these life-saving programs will be insolvent and benefits could start to be reduced as soon as 2026 for Medicare and 2033, a year earlier than previously projected, for Social Security.
โEstablishing an artificial $3.5 trillion spending number and then reverse-engineering the partisan social priorities that should be funded isnโt how you make good policy. Undoubtedly some will argue that bold social-policy action must be taken now. While I share the belief that we should help those who need it the most, we must also be honest about the present economic reality.โ
Well, Senator Manchin, I can tell you, that is where you and the Democrats have a serious disagreement. They donโt want to be honest about the present economic reality. The Democrats recognize that when it comes to spending and the size of government, math is the enemy. Math is not on their side. Remember when we were told just a few months ago that inflation would be transient, temporary?
It turns out, it will keep going up because math. We spent a whole lot of money in excess of what weโve already spent, and some people are starting to recognize that this is a problem, especially for those who donโt have a lot of assets and rely on wages. So while Joe Biden can run around and talk about (impression), โ(mutters) Middle class and jobs! Class! Jobs. Middle class. You know, here I am!
โI got the blond hairs on the legs, and they touched the hair that was bleached by the sun while I โ I was at the community pool.โ Some of you will remember that thatโs actually pretty much a direct quote of Joe Bidenโs โ one of his weirdest speeches. โLegs on my hair would stand up allโฆโ So weird. But he sniffs peopleโs heads, grabs them, does all kinds of weird things โ and Democrats have no problem with that whatsoever.
Anyway. โFor those who will dismiss my unwillingness to support a $3.5 trillion bill as political posturing, I hope they heed the powerful words of Adm. Mike Mullen, a former chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, who called debt the biggest threat to national security.โ Thatโs also from this op-ed in the Wall Street Journal by West Virginia senator Joe Manchin.
Look, friends, they are going to try to do everything they can to try to get this through, because everything else that the Biden administration touches is in a state of free fall or has already collapsed. Itโs a mess. Theyโre not making things better for you, theyโre making things worse, and people see it. The economy is weak. Inflation is rising. Gas prices are high. The border is a disaster.
Our Afghan withdrawal was a catastrophe in the way that it was executed. Crime in major U.S. cities way up. An all-time high for overdosed debts, last year in this country and continuing to be very high this year. And the Biden administration is not doing anything about the border that is feeding this problem. In fact, theyโve kicked it wide open, and what did they say they were going to do?
He said he was going to โshut down the virus not the economy.โ How is that going for us? Well, letโs take Mu variant as well as the Delta variant. You can see, nope, they have not figured that out either. So what exactly have we gotten here? A constantโฆ Biden promised the American people normalcy when he ran in 2020. That was the big pitch. He was going to hide in the basement and promise things are going to go back to normal.
And his version of normal, as we all see it, is dysfunction that forces the American people, who are honest, to lower their expectations constantly, about their day-to-day lives and about the future of America. Thatโs what normalcy means for Biden: โLower your expectations, folks. Itโs going to get worse.โ
I think we should fight against that. I donโt think that we should concede that that is the future under a Biden adminisโฆ Well, it is the future under the Biden administration, but it doesnโt to have be the future, which is why we have take power away from them in the midterm election and then shut down the socialist madness here.
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