▲ | dangus 2 days ago | ||||||||||||||||
I don’t think it’s party willingness to deal with government efficiency, I think it is more accurate to say that neither party thinks that government efficiency is a significant problem. In other words, it’s just something Trump wanted to do. The GOP is very firmly under his control. The other policy that’s like that is tariffs. Nobody in the GOP wants tariffs except for Trump. You could see the lack of cheers at the SOTU. The other truth of the matter is that the Republican Party has become addicted to cutting taxes without replacing revenue. It seems to me that there’s a desire to create a debt crisis to justify cuts to social programs. In reality, social programs would be highly sustainable if taxes on corporations and wealthy individuals weren’t continually being reduced. | |||||||||||||||||
▲ | parineum 2 days ago | parent [-] | ||||||||||||||||
> I don’t think it’s party willingness to deal with government efficiency, I think it is more accurate to say that neither party thinks that government efficiency is a significant problem. That wasn't the point I was making. The point I was making was that Bill Clinton was able to balance the budget _and_ keep the programs he wanted to not because it was something he originally wanted to do. He did it because the Democrats lost power in the midterms to Republicans who ran on balancing the budget. He was looking at either not being able to do anything he wanted and possibly vetoing a Republican agenda that the American people just voted for or changing his own agenda to more closely align with that and work with the Republicans to make sure programs that Democrats really wanted weren't cut but still balancing the budget. He did the latter and it's largely used as a point of pride for the democratic party but they ignore the fact that it was only achieved through compromise. A more modern opportunity/example for this would have been if Biden, after the midterms, chose to work with yhe Republican congress on immigration reform and get something done that everyone could live with. Instead he doubled down and made the situation worse, supercharging the issue in the next election leading to the election of Trump on largely that platform. I'm not blaming just the Democrats for this, neither party would do it, it's just the example that came to mind. > In reality, social programs would be highly sustainable if taxes on corporations and wealthy individuals weren’t continually being reduced. There's not really a good example of this in practice. Healthy social programs in other countries are typically funded largely through pretty substantial middle class taxes. There simply aren't enough rich people and corporations to yax to fund the rest of the country. The desire to tax the other to fund my benefits is the problem. Instead of looking at poverty and wanted to do something about it, we look to other people and tell them they should do something about it. | |||||||||||||||||
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