http://theparadoxproject.org/blog-1/2016/5/17/what-has-the-gop-done-for-me-latelyThe GOP Won the Spending War While No One Was LookingMAY 18, 2016
By MATTHIAS SHAPIRO
In an election season defined by frustration with the government and elected officials, one of the most frequent questions I hear in opposition to Republican governance is this:
“We elected these Republicans into office, gave them both Congress and the Senate. And what have they done for us?”
— people on twitter
I don’t approach most questions as rhetorical, even when they are meant to be. I use numbers, and this question is no exception.
When I first came into the political scene, it was through my interest in numbers. My first snarky comment was in the form of an absurd little internet video that made a light mockery of some of the empty promises to reign in spending from the Obama administration. Obama promised to find $100 million in cuts to make to a nearly $4 trillion budget. I found the paucity of that promise to reduce spending funny in light of the enormity of scope of the federal government.
I followed this up with a dive into Obama's first budget. This first budget stunned me in that, while the Obama administration was predicting a rather stunning and rapid recovery from the Great Recession, he was also predicting enormous federal spending increases as far as the eye could see.
It seemed strange that the answer to fixing the recession was "more spending" and then, after the recession was fixed, the answer was still "more spending."
A president’s budget proposal tends to be a curious document that acts as part wishful thinking and part a projection of hope into the future. For example, Bush’s last budget proposal showed a federal government that was on track to produce a balanced budget within a few years. Obama’s budget, on the other hand, anticipated a massive spending increase in the first year (due to stimulus spending) followed by pretty typical increases of about 6 percent per year.
That "6 percent" is important because in 2009 it was the rate at which federal spending had grown year over year for almost 30 years. So that is the number the Obama team used as their standard for how quickly spending should keep growing.
But after Republicans took control of Congress in 2011, despite what you may have heard, they really did put a brake on federal spending. A really good brake. In fact, since 2011, federal spending has increased at only 1.3 percent per year ... the slowest rate since the aftermath of World War II.
This might not seem like a big difference. After all, spending is still growing, isn’t it? But capping the spending increases by that much year over hear has a massive cumulative effect. Consider what Obama projected in his budgets against what the Republican Congress gave him.
2012 was the first fiscal year that Republicans were able to vote on after gaining control of Congress. The y-axis is in "trillions" but I didn't label it properly because, at my core, I am a lazy person.
The projected federal spending number in this chart is the initial spending projection for those years taken from Obama’s budgets. It represents how the Obama team anticipated to spend given a standard 6 percent yearly increase in spending. The orange bar is what the federal government actually spent.
In 2009, Obama promised to cut federal spending by $100 million, which sounds big but is actually hilariously small in terms of federal spending. By contrast, by 2012 (the first fiscal year the majority GOP could even influence), the Republicans had slashed Obama’s budget expectations by $217 billion … more than 2,000 times that amount.
And that was just the beginning.
The difference between Obama’s 2015 spending projection and what was actually spent was an astounding $697 billion dollars. That’s more money than we spent on Medicaid.
Let that sink in.
In five years, the Republicans managed to hold back Obama's spending increases by more money than if they actually got rid of Medicaid. And so far 2016 looks like it will hold to that trend.
The 2016 number is a projection of current spending trends through to the end of the 2016 fiscal year. The y-axis is in billions. I refer you to the previous "lazy" comment.
If you took the difference between Obama’s projected spending and the actual spending appropriated by Congress for all five years, it’s a jaw-dropping difference of $2.5 trillion.
Obama held a press conference to announce his plan to reduce spending by $100 million. If the GOP Congress had held a press conference every time they actually reduced spending from Obama's projections by $100 million, they could have held a press conference every two hours of every day since they took control of Congress in 2011 until now.
Their success in corralling federal spending is a feat unparalleled in my lifetime. The GOP's work to block Obama's spending should be cause for major celebration from serious fiscal hawks. Unfortunately, conservatives don't seem to even know that this has happened, much less how to celebrate these wins. The narrative of a feckless "Establishment" betraying the electorate is more potent than the facts on the ground.
*The US budget fiscal year starts in October of the previous year. So, for example, the 2011 federal budget actually covered spending from October 1, 2010 until September 30, 2011. So it was already in effect before the Republicans were even elected in 2010 and was already a quarter over by the time they took office in 2011. The first budget they were able to influence was the 2012 budget.