If irony is a crucial ingredient to comedy, the House of Representatives was a laugh riot this week thanks to some serious silliness about sequestration and defense spending.
The very same day that the House took up a bill to fund the government for another six monthsโa stopgap measure to kick funding decisions for fiscal year 2013 to the next Congressโit passed legislation introduced by Representative Allen West (R-FL) that would put the brakes on the defense spending cuts mandated by the Budget Control Act (BCA), itself a stopgap measure.
The irony behind this bill, titled the โNational Security and Jobs Protection Act,โ is threefold. First, Rep. Westโalong with many of the billโs supportersโ was among the 343 members of Congress who passed the BCA last year. Second, the bill was debated amidst a flurry of hearings and reports on waste in the Pentagon budget. Finally, the bill prescribes the very same kind of government-sponsored economic stimulus that Rep. West and many other lawmakers despise.
Rep. West says he voted for the BCA to stop the President from receiving โa blank check to continue his spending binge.โ His new billโwhich the Senate wonโt touch and the White House vowed to vetoโwould lower the BCAโs cap on discretionary funds while removing the โfirewallโ between defense and non-defense spending. That means the Pentagon would get off the hook while non-defense agencies like transportation and energy take a bigger hit. Similar proposals have been fielded by lawmakers including Senator John McCain (R-AZ), who argues the cuts would weaken our national security.
Yet on the same day the bill reached the House floor, the House Oversight and Government Affairs Committee held a hearing on a Special Inspector General for Afghanistan Reconstruction report that records of hundreds of millions of dollarsโ worth of fuel in Afghanistan had gone missing. The House Armed Services Committee (HASC) simultaneously held a hearing on deadly cockpit malfunctions in the F-22 Raptor, a ridiculously expensive white elephant aircraft that some members of Congress are trying to revive after its cancellation three years ago. Wednesday saw another HASC hearing on waste in Pentagon contracting, followed by one on Friday questioning DODโs slow progress toward achieving an audit. Oh, and the National Research Council reported that missile defenseโthe most expensive defense program ever at $200 billion and countingโis a flop.
Defenders of the effort to skirt the sequestration they themselves adopted a little over a year ago were blithely unaware of these developments. Indeed, the debate devolved into a partisan fight over the role of government in job creation. Majority Leader Eric Cantor (R-VA) briefly touched on sequestrationโs impact on national security, but spent the bulk of his floor time complaining about its effect on jobs in his district, down to the grocer who provides produce to military bases. The contradiction inherent in his argumentsโthat government-driven jobs programs are bad unless they involve defenseโseemed lost on him. You canโt have it both ways.
Thereโs a simple fix for sequestration. In fact, itโs written right in the BCA: Adopt $1.2 trillion in deficit reduction. We came up with $1.5 trillion last year and in a few weeks will release billions more (keep reading your Wastebasket). Furthermore, if lawmakers really want to stop blank checks for spending binges, they should start with the Pentagon, not stop short of it. Any fiscal plan that refuses to take on a budget that has more than doubled in the past decade, constitutes nearly 60 percent of our discretionary spending and is rife with waste to boot is not just inefficient, itโs dangerous. Our economic strength is our first line of defense, and the best way to protect it is to make every part of government vigilant against waste.