Obama’s New Budget Would Rack Up Additional $3.5 Trillion in US Debt!

Obama's new budget would add $3.5 Trillion to US Deficit!

Obama's new budget would add $3.5 Trillion to US Deficit!

The CBO has scored the Obama administration’s new budget, and their non-partisan analysis shows that Obama has no plan to reduce the huge deficit that the Democrats and his administration have exploded.

The CBO analysis of Obama’s budget exposes what Obama and the Democrats don’t want you to know; that Obama and the Democrats have no idea how to reduce the Obama administration’s rampant over-spending, and are hell-bent on bankrupting our nation as quickly as possible!

President Obama’s budget would pile up an additional $3.5 trillion in debt over the next 10 years and shows the government’s trust funds running out of money in 2020, Congress’s official non-partisan scorekeeper said Friday.

In 2012 alone Mr. Obama’s budget would leave a $1.3 trillion deficit — $82 billion worse than if none of his policies were enacted. Over the next ten years the deficit would dip to less than a half-trillion dollars in 2017, but would rise again in the later years.

By 2022, a decade from now, the federal government would spend $5.6 trillion and take in $4.9 trillion in revenue — both figures far outstripping today’s levels.

CBO’s analysis also shows the government’s combined trust funds, including the Social Security trust funds and the cash flow of the Postal Service, will begin running deficits in 2020.

Mr. Obama released his budget last month, but it has received scant attention on Capitol Hill, where both Republicans and Democrats have ignored it. It proposed a mixture of new tax increases and tax cuts, and called for some new spending, particularly in education and infrastructure, but mostly left the entitlement programs such as Medicare and Social Security untouched.

House Republicans are pushing to write their own budget that would address the costs of those major programs. CBO’s analysis on Friday said the programs will continue to eat up an ever-larger share of government spending over the next decade, rising from $2.1 trillion in spending this year to $3.4 trillion in a decade.

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, Nevada Democrat, has said he doesn’t want to take up a budget in his chamber.

He says last year’s debt deal already set levels for the annual spending bills to meet, so no budget is necessary.

That debt deal did not address the long-term increases in mandatory spending programs.

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