



Thomas Hayes is a Democratic campaign staffer, entrepreneur, journalist, and photographer who contributes regularly to a host of web sites on topics ranging from economics and politics to culture and community.





The GOP claims they're really serious about deficit reduction, but Sentator McConnell (R-KY) says it's the " uniform view in his caucus that tax cuts needn’t be offset by other changes in spending... " Evidently none of them think tax cuts affect the budget.$678 billion - it's a math thing. Republican Whip Jon Kyl (R-AZ) doesn't even want to talk about it There's ample evidence that the tax cuts enacted under the previous administration were, in fact, the largest factor in rapidly turning the Treasury's surplus in 2000 into the deficit under the Bush administration which mostly enjoyed a Republican Congressional majority.What kind of voodoo budgeting lets you ignore a revenue decrease? We lost 3 million manufacturing jobs while Bush was President, but the GOP line is that tax cuts will help? Tax cuts don't put groceries on the table of an unemployed person, but they do add to the deficit - it's not complex math.We've got to get more rational in discussing the budget and the deficit.Leaders who will safeguard the interests of ordinary citizens are becoming an endangered species in the Congress. In late summer 2008 Congressional leaders and the Bush administration told the country that big business needed behemoth bailouts or our entire economic system would collapse, but that, and while some say the jury's still out on job creation if the GOP pundits insist the Obama-era stimulus package didn't help then what of the Bush-era bailout? The bailout certainly didn't stimulate lending, though it did give banks enough cash for lavish year-end bonuses.Can you think of another industry that would award bonuses when they had to get billions of dollars simply to remain in business?And now Senate Republicans want to balance the budget (and stir up fears about deficits) while they claim there's no need to offset tax cuts with other revenue?Think about that. Tax cuts may or may not make be your cup of tea; they're a tool in the economist's arsenal. Yet to claim on the one hand deficits are bad and then turn around and advocate revenue reduction---- without offsetting it in any way defies the reasoning powers we expect in our elected leaders.