Wednesday, April 6, 2011

Some things never change

Well in spite of my long absence some things we are discussing have not changed. My previous post obviously was timely, only a year ahead of its time but who is counting.

Here is an interesting report from a year ago, how fitting for today however...

No Democrat-Controlled Congress Has Balanced Federal Budget in 40 Years; No Republican President Has Balanced Federal Budget in 50 Years

Monday, March 15, 2010



By Terence P. Jeffrey


No Congress in which the Democrats controlled both the House and Senate has balanced the federal budget since fiscal 1969--more than 40 years ago
 
(CNSNews.com) - Many leading Democrats in Washington these days like to point to the fact that the federal budget was balanced for part of the time that President Bill Clinton was in office. What they do not mention is that those balanced budgets occurred only when Republicans controlled both houses of Congress.



In fact, according to the historical data published by the Office of Management and Budget in the Obama White House, no Congress in which the Democrats controlled both the House and Senate has balanced the federal budget since fiscal 1969--more than 40 years ago.


The federal appropriations made for that fiscal year—which began on July 1, 1968 and ended on June 30, 1969--were approved by a Democrat-controlled Congress elected in 1966. They were signed by lame-duck Democratic President Lyndon Johnson, who had decided not to run for reelection in 1968. (Until 1977, the federal fiscal year began on July 1 and ended on June 30. Since 1977, it has begun on Oct. 1 and ended on Sept. 30. Federal fiscal years are numbered by the calendar year in which they end.)






President Eisenhower in 1960 was the last Republican president to preside over a balanced budget. A Democrat-controlled Congress elected in 1958 approved the appropriations for that fiscal year in 1959.


More recently, the federal budget was balanced in fiscal years 1998, 1999, 2000 and 2001. A Republican-controlled Congress approved the appropriations for each one of those years and Democratic President Bill Clinton signed them. In fiscal years 1994 and 1995, when President Clinton governed with a Democrat-controlled Congress, the federal government ran deficits of $203.2 billion and $163.9 billion respectively.


The Republican majority Congress elected in November 1994 presided over two fiscal years with declining deficits—fiscal 1996 and 1997—before it initially balanced the budget in fiscal 1998. In fiscal 1996 and 1997, the deficits were $107.4 billion and $21.9 billion respectively.






In the 2000 election, Republicans retained control of the House but the Senate split 50-50 between Republicans and Democrats. In May 2001, Sen. Jim Jeffords of Vermont switched parties from Republican to Independent and began caucusing with the Democrats, giving the Democrats the effective majority and making then-Sen. Tom Daschle (D.-S.D.) the majority leader.






That split Congress was responsible for the appropriations for fiscal 2002, which put the federal government back into a deficit. After Republicans regained control of the Senate in the November 2002 elections (thus taking control of the budget process for fiscal 2004 which would begin on Oct. 1, 2003), the all-Republican Congress continued running deficits for four fiscal years (2004, 2005, 2006, 2007). During that time, with President George W. Bush in the White House, the Republicans controlled both the legislative and executive branches but failed to balance the budget.






In the November 2006 elections, Democrats won back the majority in both the House and Senate, and in the three fiscal years that have started since then (2008, 2009, 2010), they have run record deficits of $458.6 billion, $1.41 trillion and $1.55 trillion.






The estimated deficit for this fiscal year (2010) of $1.55 trillion is more than three times as large as the $458.6 billion deficit that President George W. Bush presided over with a Democratic Congress in fiscal 2008. In fiscal 2010, of course, Democrats controlled both Houses of Congress as well as the White House.






Since 1960, the federal budget has been balanced in only 6 fiscal years. For two of those fiscal years—1960 and 1969—Democrats controlled Congress. For four—1998, 1999, 2000, 2001—Republicans controlled Congress.WHO BALANCED THE BUDGET?






The chart below lists the fiscal years since 1960, the president who was in office when that fiscal year began, the political party that controlled Congress when that fiscal year began, whether the federal budget was balanced in that fiscal year, and the amount of the federal surplus or deficit in that fiscal year. The figures for federal deficits and surpluses come from the “Historical Tables—Budget of the U.S. Government, Fiscal 2011,” published by the Office of Management and Budget in the Obama White House.






Control of Congress Budget Balanced? Deficit/Surplus






President Dwight Eisnehower (Left office Jan. 20, 1961)


1960 Democrat YES $301 million


1961 Democrat No --$3.3 billion






President John F. Kennedy (Assassinated Nov. 22, 1963)


1962 Democrat No --$7.1 billion


1963 Democrat No --$4.8 billion


1964 Democrat No --$5.9 billion






President Lyndon B. Johnson (Left office Jan. 20, 1969)


1965 Democrat No --$1.4 billion


1966 Democrat No --$3.7 billion


1967 Democrat No --$8.6 billion


1968 Democrat No --$25.2 billion


1969 Democrat YES $3.2 billion






President Richard M. Nixon (Resigned Aug. 9, 1974)


1970 Democrat No --$2.8 billion


1971 Democrat No --$23.0 billion


1972 Democrat No --$23.4 billion


1973 Democrat No --$14.9 billion


1974 Democrat No --$6.1 billion


1975 Democrat No --$53.2 billion






President Gerald Ford (Left office Jan. 20, 1977)


1976 Democrat No --$73.7 billion


1977 Democrat No --$53.7 billion






President Jimmy Carter (Left office Jan. 20, 1981)


1978 Democrat No --$59.1 billion


1979 Democrat No --$40.7 billion


1980 Democrat No --$73.8 billion


1981 Democrat No --$78.9 billion






President Ronald W. Reagan (Left office Jan. 20, 1989)


1982 Split No --$127.9 billion


1983 Split No --$207.8 billion


1984 Split No --$185.3 billion


1985 Split No --$212.3 billion


1986 Split No --$221.2 billion


1987 Split No --$149.7 billion


1988 Democrat No --$155.1 billion


1989 Democrat No --$152.6 billion






President George H.W. Bush (Left office Jan. 20, 1993)


1990 Democrat No --$221.0 billion


1991 Democrat No --$269.2 billion


1992 Democrat No --$290.3 billion


1993 Democrat No --$255.0 billion






President William J. Clinton (Left office Jan. 20, 2001)


1994 Democrat No --$203.2 billion


1995 Democrat No --$163.9 billion


1996 Republican No --$107.4 billion


1997 Republican No --$21.9 billion


1998 Republican YES $69.2 billion


1999 Republican YES $125.6 billion


2000 Republican YES $236.2 billion


2001 Republican YES $128.2 billion






President George W. Bush (Left office Jan. 20, 2009)


2002 Split No --$157.8 billion


2003 Split No --$377.6 billion


2004 Republican No --$412.7 billion


2005 Republican No --$318.3 billion


2006 Republican No --$248.2 billion


2007 Democrat No --$160.7 billion


2008 Democrat No --$458.6 billion


2009 Democrat No --$1.41 trillion






President Barack Obama


2010 Democrat No --$1.55 trillion
 
 
 
As you can see this war has been ongoing for decades and the Democrats have more often than not been the perpetrators of the massive spending issues that have brought us to where we are today.
 
Stand tough as we go through the withdrawal process, spending is like any other addiction: it will not be easy to be weaned from its ill-effects.
 
"Tough times don't last but tough people do"