Republicans on the House Budget Committee are pushing forward with a new budget resolution this year designed largely to rein in spending on entitlement programs like Medicare and Social Security, according to the panel’s chairman.

President Trump Donald John TrumpObama calls on Senate not to fill Ginsburg's vacancy until after election Planned Parenthood: 'The fate of our rights' depends on Ginsburg replacement Progressive group to spend M in ad campaign on Supreme Court vacancy MORE has delivered his 2019 budget, Rep. Steve Womack Stephen (Steve) Allen WomackEx-CBO director calls for more than trillion in coronavirus stimulus spending Overnight Defense: Lawmakers tear into Pentagon over .8B for border wall | Dems offer bill to reverse Trump on wall funding | Senators urge UN to restore Iran sanctions Lawmakers trade insults over Trump budget cuts MORE (R-Ark.) said Wednesday, “and it's now the Congress’s time to act.”

Womack, who captured the Budget gavel just last month, acknowledged that the sweeping fiscal agreement enacted last week — which solidifies discretionary spending levels over the next two years — essentially precludes the need for Congress to enact a new budget governing domestic programs for 2019. He also conceded that the Senate, for that very reason, is likely to skip the budget process this year altogether.

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But citing skyrocketing deficit spending, Womack said he wants his committee to step in with a new budget blueprint — if only as a symbolic gesture — “to put America on a different glide path, from a fiscal perspective.”

“We've got to have an opportunity to look at these from top to bottom, and then come up with what we believe are solutions that can be politically doable,” Womack told Bloomberg Television.

“That's what the Budget Committee process will begin to do.”

That effort, Womack suggested, will focus heavily on the entitlement side of the ledger, which was largely disregarded in the newly passed budget deal that Trump signed into law on Friday.

“I think it’s fundamental,” Womack said of entitlement reform. “Seventy-eight percent of what we spend in your tax dollars goes out on autopilot.”

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Womack emphasized that it’s early in the process — “I'm not going to try to prescribe an outcome for my committee,” he said — but floated the notion of tapping reconciliation as a device for fast-tracking entitlement changes.

“You can hear the chatter from the other end of the Capitol, the Senate wing, that says that they may or may not do a budget this year because we've set the top line numbers on discretionary and they won't change anything on the mandatory side,” he said.

“But if you look at the fiscal glide path of this country, it is not a sustainable formula.”

The focus on entitlements is consistent with the message coming from Speaker Paul Ryan Paul Davis RyanKenosha will be a good bellwether in 2020 At indoor rally, Pence says election runs through Wisconsin Juan Williams: Breaking down the debates MORE (R-Wis.), who has vowed to tackle the issue this year.

“We’re never going to give up on entitlement reform,” Ryan told Fox Business on Tuesday.

Any such effort, however, would almost certainly be dead on arrival in the Senate, where Majority Leader Mitch McConnell Addison (Mitch) Mitchell McConnellObama calls on Senate not to fill Ginsburg's vacancy until after election Planned Parenthood: 'The fate of our rights' depends on Ginsburg replacement Progressive group to spend M in ad campaign on Supreme Court vacancy MORE (R-Ky.) has dismissed the idea of addressing entitlements ahead of the midterm elections.

The Republicans’ stated concern for deficit spending is sure to ring hollow with Democrats, who are quick to point out that the GOP’s tax-code overhaul, passed in December, is estimated to add roughly $1 trillion to the debt. No Democrat in either chamber supported the bill.

Those tax cuts, the Democrats charge, are part of the Republicans’ two-step “starve the beast” strategy: first, slash revenues; second, cut federal programs, citing deficit-spending concerns.

“They've abandoned any discipline on the debt,” House Minority Whip Steny Hoyer Steny Hamilton HoyerHouse Democrats postpone vote on marijuana decriminalization bill Democrats scramble on COVID-19 relief amid division, Trump surprise The Hill's Morning Report - Sponsored by The Air Line Pilots Association - Pence lauds Harris as 'experienced debater'; Trump, Biden diverge over debate prep MORE (D-Md.) said Tuesday.

It’s unclear if the Democrats will introduce a 2019 budget of their own. Rep. John Yarmuth John Allen YarmuthGOP, White House struggle to unite behind COVID-19 relief House seeks ways to honor John Lewis Karen Bass's star rises after leading police reform push MORE (Ky.), the senior Democrat on the Budget panel, has suggested there would be no need to do so unless Womack pressed forward with a GOP bill

“Our own budget might be moot,” Yarmuth told Bloomberg Tuesday. “[But] if they propose their budget, then we'll probably propose our own.”

Womack, for his part, is vowing to protect those currently benefitting from the entitlements.

“We [have] got to be careful not to jerk that rag out from underneath the people that are currently receiving those benefits or nearing retirement and have planned their lives around them,” he told Bloomberg. “This is a great challenge for Congress. You can't do this on discretionary spending alone. It's just simply not mathematically possible.”

Yarmuth said there are cost-cutting entitlement reforms the Democrats are willing to accept, including items like empowering Medicare to negotiate the price of prescription drugs. Where the Democrats will draw their line, he warned, is if the cuts scale back Medicare services or access to care.

“Clearly, we would want to make sure that there is no reduction in benefits to patients,” he told reporters Monday.