2

President Obama defends his 2012 budget

President Barack Obama speaks during a news conference at the South Court Auditorium of the Eisenhower Executive Office Building of the White House in Washington, D.C.

To view this content, Javascript must be enabled and Adobe Flash Player must be installed.

Get Adobe Flash player

TEXT OF STORY

Kai Ryssdal: President Obama took to the podium this morning to defend his budget. He's been getting it from both sides of the aisle for taking only a tepid stab at the huge financial hole the federal government has dug. Fact is, almost whatever was in the budget yesterday was going to be criticized.

But the president already had a bipartisan roadmap for fixing the big problems, a roadmap that he mostly ignored. Our Washington bureau chief John Dimsdale reports.


John Dimsdale: Remember the president's Fiscal Reform Commission? Back in December, it produced a roadmap for bringing deficits under control. There were tough spending cuts, entitlement and tax reforms. At the time, President Obama praised the commission's work. But very little of it ended up in yesterday's budget. When the president's budget director went to Capitol Hill this morning, the Republican committee chairman Paul Ryan wanted to know what happened.

Paul Ryan: I think the fact the president even gave us this fiscal commission to start with acknowledged we agree on the size, the scope and the nature of the problem. Why did you duck? Why are you not taking this opportunity to lead?

Down the street, at a White House news conference, Obama insisted he still values the commission's plan.

Barack Obama: The notion that its been shelved I think is incorrect. It still provides a framework for a conversation.

A conversation, he says, that will take some time. But former Congressional Budget Office director Rudolph Penner says time is running out.

Rudolph Penner: If he had just a little more courage, he would have talked more about the seriousness of the budget problem. He's been extremely politically cautious but I would argue he's also been very reckless with the economy.

Because if there's not a plan soon to attack the long-term deficit, Penner says buyers of the federal government's debt will look elsewhere. Overall those foreign investments are up, but just this week China announced it was scaling back U.S. bond-buying for the second month in a row.

In Washington, I'm John Dimsdale for Marketplace.

About the author

As head of Marketplace’s Washington, D.C. bureau, John Dimsdale provides insightful commentary on the intersection of government and money for the entire Marketplace portfolio.
Jimmy Choooo's picture
Jimmy Choooo - Feb 16, 2011

Obama already said today that nothing is shelves. It's only shelves in the minds of the media. His example was that the media presumes nothing will get done after the midterm. What happen? everything was done within two weeks before the end of the year. Marketplace is jumping into the same short school bus.
Health reform took 40 years. nothing was done until this last year.

Like Obama said, this is the first step. He the GOP can't play ball on the easy stuff, they won't play ball on the bigger cuts to come.

Jonathan Lovelace's picture
Jonathan Lovelace - Feb 15, 2011

If Obama had more courage, to say nothing of more *sense*, he would have done more than *talk* about cutting the budget. He would have made a proposal that actually cut the budget, instead of relying on accounting smoke and mirrors to make it *look* like he did.

And I repeat: why are you covering the president, when there *are* (a few) leaders with real courage in Washington with far more sensible proposals?