To: justshe
Here ya go.
Do Republicans really support smaller government? Here are some interesting facts:
- Republicans controlled both Houses of Congress from 1995 through 2001 during which time the federal budget grew from $1.4 trillion to $2.1 trillion (about $100 billion annually). [source]
- Since Republicans took control of the House in 1995, federal discretionary spending has grown by a rate of about 7% annually. The number of earmarks lawmakers have put in the spending bills to steer federal funds to their districts has also grown. By one estimate, between fiscal years 2001 and 2002, they increased from about 6,300 to 8,300, or 32%. [source]
- Social welfare programs under George W. Bush have grown by $96 billion in just two years, versus $51 billion under six years of Clinton, according to economist Stephen Moore of the Club for Growth. [source]
- When Ronald Reagan became president in 1981 the federal budget was $680 billion. When he left office in 1989 the federal budget was $1.14 trillion -- an increase of 67%. [source]
- The last Republican presidents to preside over a decrease in federal spending were Warren G. Harding (who served from 1921 until his death in 1923) and Calvin Coolidge (who served from 1923 until 1929). During that time federal spending decreased 44% from $5 billion to $2.85 billion. However, spending began increasing again in 1928 before Calvin Coolidge left office. [source]
WEALTH REDISTRIBUTION PROGRAMS & POLITICAL BOONDOGGLES
- [source] $5 billion bailout and $10 billion loan for airlines via the Air Transportation Safety and System Stabilization Act.
- [source] $521 million Amtrak budget for fiscal 2002.
- [source] $205 million bailout plus $100 million loan to Amtrak.
- [source] Dept. of Transportation budget increased by 6% over fiscal 2001 to $59.5 billion. (riddled with pork)
- [source] $145 million for the New Freedom Initiative to ensure transportation alternatives for people with disabilities.
- [source] "Homebuyer bill of rights" to Reform Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act -- federal regulation of real estate.
- [source] Continued anti-trust lawsuit against Microsoft.
- [source] $1 billion over 5 years for the poor to purchase homes via the "American Dream Down Payment Fund."
- [source] Proposed $3.7 billion in new Medicare funding over the next three years (2003-2005) .
- [source] Health care subsidies for laid-off workers and expanded job retraining benefits ($10 billion to $12 billion over 10 years).
- [source] Wage insurance -- federal wage supplement.
- [source] $67 million in taxpayers' money to finance presidential campaign via federal matching funds.
- [source] Issued executive order creating the Office of Faith-Based and Community Initiatives.
- [source] Submitted largest budget ever to Congress, $2.13 trillion.
- [source] Increased debt-limit from $5.95 trillion to $6.4 trillion.
- [source] Scholarships for Cuban students and professionals via the Initiative for a New Cuba.
- [source] Increased budget for National Health Service Corps by $44 million to $191.5 million.
- [source] $150 million for the Coast Guard and the Customs Service to hire new personnel.
- [source] Increased farm subsidies by $180 billion over 10 years via the Farm Security Act.
- [source] Increased Pentagon budget by 12% over fiscal 2001 from $316 billion to $355 billion.
- [source] $560 million for the USA Freedom Corps which includes $230 million for AmeriCorps.
- [source] Double the number of Peace Corps volunteers at a cost of $200 million over five years.
- [source] $3.5 million for SuperBowl anti-drug ads.
- [source] Faith-based subsidies.
- [source] Increased federal spending on education from $39.9 billion to $44.5 billion via the "No Child Left Behind Act."
- [source] Signed Congressional payraise of $4,900.
- [source] Patients Bill of Rights.
- [source] Federal Compassion Capital Fund, $700 million over 10 years.
- [source] $100 million to beef up investigative manpower and technology at the SEC.
- [source] $6 million to upgrade a U.S. Geological Survey data center near Sioux Falls, S.D.
- [source] $10 million to help farmers near the Rio Grande River involved in a water dispute with Mexico.
- [source] $7 million for enhancing water supplies in New Mexico.
- [source] A provision pressuring the Agriculture Department to reimburse poultry producers in West Virginia and Virginia for losses from avian influenza.
- [source] $1 billion for Pell grants for low-income students.
- [source] $417 million for veterans' medical care.
- [source] $400 million to help states improve voting systems.
- [source] $100 million for countering western wildfires and floods.
- [source] Taxpayer-funded national memorial, congressional gold medals, and gold coins for victims of 9/11.
- [source] Scholarships and grants to nurses and help hospitals with retention.
- [source] Increased the NEA budget by $10 million, to $126 million.
- [source] $200,000 for a trucker congestion notification system in Tacoma, Washington.
- [source] $500,000 to save the Prebles Meadow Jumping Mouse in Colorado.
- [source] $62 million to promote the Sacajawea dollar coin.
- [source] $100,000 a month to monitor news reports and offer advice on media strategy for the Pentagon.
- [source] $1.5 million for maintenance of the Vulcan Statue in Alabama built for the 1904 World's Fair.
- [source] $20 million annually for "Strategic Milk Reserve." Was phased out in 1999 by the 1996 Freedom to Farm Act. Congress extended it temporarily, and then made it permanent again in the farm bill that President Bush signed into law in May.
- [source] $877 million in disaster relief for victims of Tropical Storm Allison.
- [source] $2 million in federal recovery assistance to typhoon victims in Guam.
- [source] Steel and lumber tariffs.
- [source] $1.7 billion plus $300 million in emergency funds for the Low-Income Home Energy Assistance Program (LIHEAP) via the Supplemental Appropriations Act of 2001.
- [source] $230 million for the Weatherization Assistance Program.
- [source] Federal disaster relief for tonado victims in Maryland.
- [source] Payoff to families of 9/11 victims with taxpayer money via the "Victim Compensation Fund."
- [source] Bush pushes for school vouchers.
- [source] $450,000 in federal funds for the Chicago Project for Violence Prevention for fiscal year 2003 on top of $750,000 in 2002.
- [source] $752 million in drought aid to livestock farmers.
- [source] $30 million in research grants over the next five years to develop new ways of making industrial products from plants and natural waste materials.
- [source] $10 billion military reserve fund for the Pentagon.
- [source] National Institute of Health to spend $24 million on a retirement facility for chimpanzees.
- [source] $750,000 for grasshopper research in Alaska.
- [source] $2 million to house a worm collection at the Smithsonian museum in Washington, DC.
- [source] $400,000 to study manure management at the National Swine Research Center in Iowa.
- [source] $4.2 million for a shrimp aquiculture research project in six states.
- [source] $400,000 for the Montana Sheep Institute.
- [source] $23.1 billion for the National Institute of Health for fiscal 2002, a 13.5% increase over fiscal 2001.
- [source] $10 million upgrade for Amber Alerts.
- [source] $1 million to upgrade a law enforcement communication system in Placer County, CA.
- [source] $850,000 for a wastewater treatment facility in Placer County, CA
- [source] $1.7 million to purchase 6,100 acres of land along the American River.
- [source] $14 million for restoration projects in the Lake Tahoe basin.
- [source] $3 million for the acquisition of land for rare plant preserves in El Dorado County, CA.
- [source] $600,000 for the West Blount sewer system. (Alabama)
- [source] $1 million for the Duck River Dam. (Alabama)
- [source] $99,000 for sidewalk improvements at Vinemont Middle School. (Alabama)
- [source] $100 million in grants for communities to develop mosquito-control programs. (pending)
- [source] $753 million for Import-Export Bank.
- Increased loan limit for Import-Export Bank to $25 billion. Taxpayers must guarantee loans.
- [source] $159 billion deficit for fiscal 2002.
- [source] $14.2 million for Phoenix Sky Harbor traffic control tower replacement. (pending)
- [source] $4.2 million for Phoenix bus facilities. (pending)
- [source] $500,000 for a Scottsdale pilot project to determine the best technologies for removing arsenic from drinking water. (pending)
- [source] $300,000 for a Southwest Transit Assessment and Review Team (START) project for Bus Route 131, which runs through Avondale. (pending)
- [source] $500,000 for Central Arizona College to continue implementation of the Science, Engineering, Math and Aerospace Academy in Pinal County. (pending)
- [source] $1 million for Rio de Flag (Flagstaff) flood-control project. (pending)
- [source] $1.5 million for Maricopa County's AZTech Integrated Emergency and Transportation Communications Network. (pending)
- [source] Creation of new federal bureaucracy, Office of Rare Diseases.
- [source] $100 per month federal subsidy to welfare parents who marry.
- [source] $8 million to maintain a heating oil reserve to stabilize prices in the U.S. Northeast. This fund was created in 2000 by Bill Clinton.
- [source] $2 billion over 10 years to help companies develop cleaner-burning coal.
- [source] $87 billion in corporate welfare which includes (but is not limited to) funds for oil companies through the fossil energy research and development program, research subsidies to aerospace companies, the National Agricultural Statistics Service, the Foreign Agriculture Service, and the Conservation Reserve Program.
- [source] $6 million for teaching English through the Elementary School Foreign Language Incentive Program.
- [source] The federal government currently provides $700-800 million in annual ethanol subsidies.
- [source] $37 billion through 2007 for the National Science Foundation via the National Science Foundation Authorization Act of 2002. (pending)
- [source] $15 billion for NASA fiscal 2003.
- [source] $903 million in grants to spur federal agencies, industry and universities to devote more energy to cyber security research.
- [source] $533 million over two years for Project Safe Neighborhoods. Billed on the official website as "America's Network Against Gun Violence."
- [source] $900 million for the President's "Reading First" plan.
- [source] $28.9 billion "anti-terror" package. (As if the federal government didn't already spend enough on defense)
- [source] Increased FDA budget by over $120 million.
- [source] $1.1 billion for federal reading programs.
- [source] Proposed economic stimulus package which could cost as much as $600 billion over 10 years.
- [source] Ordered military to begin deploying a missile defense system.
- [source] Urged Congress to raise pay of federal judges who already earn $150,000 or more annually.
- [source] Increased the National Science Foundation budget from $4.8 billion to $7.4 billion in 2005 and $9.8 billion in 2007.
- [source] Proposed increasing defense spending to $378.5 billion next fiscal year from the $364.1 billion appropriated by Congress for fiscal 2003.
- [source] $782 billion in new spending for fiscal 2003 above what Washington spent in the previous four years.
- [source] Reinstated program to pay cash bonuses to political appointees. The program was previously stopped during the Clinton administration because of concerns about potential abuse.
- [source] "Terror insurance" which would force taxpayers to compensate those affected by future terrorist attacks.
- [source] Up to $3,000 for unemployed Americans to pay for their job searches.
52 posted on
07/01/2003 9:35:35 AM PDT by
Sir Gawain
(Straight outta Compton. Ok, not really.)
To: Sir Gawain
Social welfare programs under George W. Bush have grown by $96 billion in just two years, versus $51 billion under six years of Clinton, according to economist Stephen Moore of the Club for Growth. [source]
BUMP
58 posted on
07/01/2003 9:40:03 AM PDT by
TLBSHOW
(The Gift is to See the Truth)
To: Sir Gawain
Nice one.
74 posted on
07/01/2003 9:49:45 AM PDT by
rattrap
(Looters and Moochers and Zealots, OH MY!!!!)
To: Sir Gawain
But he "got us out of Kyoto".
97 posted on
07/01/2003 10:09:44 AM PDT by
AAABEST
To: Sir Gawain
$2 billion over 10 years to help companies develop cleaner-burning coal. WISE investment for a country known as the Saudi Arabia of coal.
442 posted on
07/01/2003 7:26:55 PM PDT by
Jorge
To: Sir Gawain
Ordered military to begin deploying a missile defense system. It's about time.
443 posted on
07/01/2003 7:28:17 PM PDT by
Jorge
To: Sir Gawain
Proposed economic stimulus package which could cost as much as $600 billion over 10 years. Of course this is mostly tax cuts which doesn't actually "COST" anything. It simply means the Govt takes less of OUR money and we get to spend it as we see fit.
Another great initiative by Bush.
445 posted on
07/01/2003 7:31:49 PM PDT by
Jorge
To: Sir Gawain
Signed Congressional payraise of $4,900. That's about a 3% pay raise over some unknown period of time since your source neglects to mention the period of time. Are all you items in your punch list like this?
494 posted on
07/01/2003 9:28:02 PM PDT by
FreeReign
(V5.0 Enterprise Edition)
To: Sir Gawain
Republicans controlled both Houses of Congress from 1995 through 2001 during which time the federal budget grew from $1.4 trillion to $2.1 trillion (about $100 billion annually). [source]50% increase over seven years is not good. It's certainly greater than GDP. Too bad your source doesn't break down the spending into mandatory vs. nonmandatory which does matter since you are trying to prove that the R Congress is at fault.
496 posted on
07/01/2003 9:32:24 PM PDT by
FreeReign
(V5.0 Enterprise Edition)
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