Mitch McConnell Touts Wild Spending Bills as 'Bipartisan' Accomplishments
Should the Senate majority leader really be celebrating more reckless spending?

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R–Ky.) celebrated bipartisanship in a Fox News op-ed yesterday. There's just one problem: His idea of bipartisanship seems to mean endless federal government spending.
The purpose of McConnell's op-ed was to call on Democrats, who won control of the House of Representatives last week, to work with Republicans. If both parties can come together, McConnell indicates there's a lot they can accomplish, just as they have in recent years.
"I have good news: reports of the death of bipartisanship in Washington have been wildly exaggerated," the Kentucky Republican writes. "In fact, some of the most significant accomplishments of this Congress have been delivered with overwhelmingly bipartisan support."
So what "significant accomplishments" is he referring to? More federal government spending, of course! McConnell writes:
Under bipartisan committee leadership, we took major steps toward restoring regular order to our appropriations process. The Senate passed more funding measures before the beginning of this fiscal year than at any point in the last two decades.
The measures included the largest year-on-year increase in defense funding in 15 years, which put an end to the Obama-era atrophy of our armed forces.
He's not wrong. For the most part, massively wasteful government spending is one thing Republicans and Democrats seem to agree on. In March, for instance, President Donald Trump signed a $1.3 trillion omnibus bill. The spending package had easily passed both houses of Congress with relatively bipartisan support, despite the many ridiculous things it allocated money for (nine of which Reason's Eric Boehm pointed out at the time).
Lawmakers weren't done. In August, Trump signed a $716 billion military budget for the 2019 fiscal year that boosted the Pentagon's spending by a whopping $82 billion. As Boehm noted, that $82 billion alone is more than the military budgets of most countries, including Russia. There was virtually no major resistance, as the bill passed 359-54 in the House and 87-10 in the Senate.
And lest one think the Department of Defense needs all that money to keep Americans safe, a 2013 Reuters investigation revealed that "$8.5 trillion in taxpayer money doled out to the Pentagon since 1996…has never been accounted for." In September, Reason's Zuri Davis reported on one egregious example of Pentagon waste: The Air Force spent over $300,000 on 391 custom coffee mugs over a two-year period.
As if that wasn't enough, Congress passed another giant spending bill in September, this one allocating $854 billion to various departments in the executive branch. Just seven senators voted no on the bill: six Republicans and Sen. Bernie Sanders (I–Vt.). Trump actually got upset about the bill, but not due to its price tag. He threw a fit because there was no new money for his proposed wall on the U.S.-Mexico border, though he ended up signing it anyway.
This kind of spending comes at a cost. The federal government ended the 2018 fiscal year with a $779 billion deficit, its largest since 2012. And according to the Congressional Budget Office, the deficit will exceed $1 trillion by 2020. In total, the federal government owes roughly $21 trillion, and as Reason's Nick Gillespie warned this week, even the interest payments on that massive debt will soon exceed what we spend on many other federal programs.
Unfortunately, neither Republicans nor Democrats in either house of Congress seem to care. McConnell is partly right: Bipartisanship can be good, just not when one of the only things lawmakers can agree on is more wild spending.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
Bipartisanship can be good, just not when one of the only things lawmakers can agree on is more wild spending.
The race to buy more votes is on!
Alt text: Old aged mutant crony turtle
Yertle the Turtle
Was King of the pond
A nice little pond
It was clean it was neat
...
I'm a ruler of all I can see
But I can't see enough
And that's the trouble with me
Cocaine Mitch in the hizzouse! Spendin' mad money cuz bipartisanism n' shit!
Yep, they're "working together" to "get things done".
>>>His idea of bipartisanship seems to mean endless federal government spending.
he didn't just show up this morning
Well he's not wrong.
So now partisanship is good?
I am so confused.
"As if that wasn't enough, Congress passed another giant spending bill in September, this one allocating $854 billion to various departments in the executive branch. Just seven senators voted no on the bill: six Republicans and Sen. Bernie Sanders (I?Vt.)."
It'll be interesting to see how this affects Sanders in the 2020 primaries. I've long believed that the next front in the Privilege Wars will involve actual war. For example, Sanders' refusal to support this bill will be condemned along the lines of him not caring about people who need entitlements, even if he opposed it, because it boosts defense spending. The next time a Democrat starts a new war, liberals who fail to stay in line and vote blue for pro-peace reasons will be condemned as privileged, because they're more concerned with foreign policy than helping people domestically.
More and more government spending is what the people want. Seriously. Politicians may ride the gravy train, but the people conduct it.
His idea of bipartisanship seems to mean endless federal government spending.
Is he wrong?
Obama-era atrophy of our armed forces
Right...
This kind of spending comes at a cost.
Whoa man, that's deep.
Not spending tends to make a certain kind of voter upset. Spending makes another type of voter upset but they are a small group of weirdoes. Not important enough to make the normals worry.
Positions, such as the one Mitch McConnell holds, absolutely need to be accountable, something he has shown zero willingness to be. He proudly announced his intent to obstruct everything Obama tried to do and now labels Dems as obstructionists. He pushed things through the Senate to show partisan control was more important than due process or doing things right for the country. The Tax Bill is extremely flawed and failed due diligence, yet his plan is to now blame Social Security, Medicaid and Medicare for our national debt. Honestly, he has been absent from the job he swore an oath to protect the constitution, yet he looks the other way as the clown prince plays president. I think he should be held as complicit to some of the most irresponsible actions we have seen in our lifetime. I also think all politicians should be on the same benefits that are responsible to defend. When public servants start acting like an elite class above, the system is broken.
Trump has ALREADY added more new debt than Obama did in 8 years! (Obama actual vs CBO 2024 forecast)
Trump is also the first President to increase the deficit over 50% during a recovery, ever!
Obama had inherited the second-worst recession since the 1930s.
Trump inherited the longest recovery ever for an incoming President -- from Obama.
As Reagan, Goldwater, Kemo, Buckley and Friedman spin puke in their graves.
Left - Right = Zero.
God help us all, says this atheist.