[NYTr] Bush raps Democrats on spending bills

All the News That Doesn't Fit nytr at blythe-systems.com
Mon Oct 15 15:13:25 EDT 2007


AP - Oct 15, 2007
http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/stories/B/BUSH?SITE=SCGRE&SECTION=HOME&TEMPLATE=DEFAULT

Bush raps Democrats on spending bills

By BEN FELLER
Associated Press Writer

CRAWFORD, Tex. (AP) -- President Bush never picked a spending fight
when his party ran Congress, but with Democrats now in charge of the
budget, he's dug in for a challenge.

In a stop in Arkansas, Bush on Monday planned to again chide
congressional leaders for failing to send him any of the 12 spending
bills that keep the government running. The budget year began Oct. 1,
and federal agencies are operating on a stopgap bill for now.

For a president short on domestic victories, the White House sees
fiscal discipline as a winning argument for Bush: a chance to label the
opposition in tax-and-spend terms.

Among fiscal conservatives, Bush's timing seems a bit late.

Bush never vetoed an appropriations bill when Republicans controlled
Congress. He is prepared to use his veto now to reject Democratic
spending bills, and with confidence; conservative House Republicans
appear to have the votes to sustain his promised vetoes.

Overall, Democrats are pressing to spend about $22 billion more on
domestic programs than Bush wants. Education, health research and
low-income housing grants are among the issues on which Bush and
Democratic leaders disagree.

Given the budget's scope, a difference in the range of $20 billion is
"trivial in economic terms," said Sidney Weintraub, an expert on trade
and economics at the Center for Strategic and International Studies.

"But they think it might have a payoff in political terms," Weintraub
said of Bush and fellow Republicans. "I think the Democrats will play
this as 'We're more responsible on budget issues than Republicans are,'
and this is their way of saying it isn't so."

Bush has already vetoed legislation that would have raised spending on
a popular children's health insurance program $35 billion over five
years. Bush has called for a $5 billion increase and planned to defend
his position again in his remarks in Rogers, Ark.

The House will vote to override his veto Thursday, but it is expected
to fall short.

Bush spent a typically quiet weekend at his Texas ranch, unseen by the
public.

His Monday schedule began in northwest Arkansas with a tour of
Stribling Packaging and Display, a manufacturing company, followed by
lunch with local business leaders and public comments on the budget.

Taxpayer money is not Bush's only focus Monday; he's raising Republican
campaign cash, too. Bush was to attend a private fundraiser in Memphis,
Tenn., to support Sen. Lamar Alexander's re-election bid.

Alexander has been an outspoken Republican critic of Bush's war
strategy, but has stood with him in rejecting Democratic legislation
that would mandate troop withdrawals. Other GOP candidates have kept
their distance from Bush, yet Alexander sees advantages.

"It's still the presidency of the United States, which is respected and
admired and attractive to people," said Tom Ingram, Alexander's chief
of staff and a campaign adviser. "The president still has a lot of
appeal in Tennessee."

© 2007 The Associated Press.




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