Congress Fails the Budget Test, Again
Despite promises to pass orderly budgets, the House GOP is poised to approve yet another stopgap spending measure.

In theory, Congress is supposed to pass 12 appropriations bills by the end of each fiscal year to fund discretionary spending on defense, as well as non-defense programs like veterans' benefits, education, transportation, and health. In practice, that hasn't happened in more than a quarter century. This year will be no different.
Despite repeated promises to return to a more orderly annual budget process, funding the federal government for three months with a stopgap measure, known as a continuing resolution (C.R.), is the best that Congress can muster.
Over the weekend, Speaker of the House Mike Johnson (R–La.) introduced a C.R. that would avert a government shutdown by "continu[ing] current funding levels through Dec. 20," reports Roll Call. Johnson described the 12-week plan as "a very narrow, bare-bones CR including only the extensions that are absolutely necessary."
The three-month C.R. is a bipartisan compromise on the six-month C.R. that died on the House floor in a 202-220 vote on Wednesday. The C.R. presently under consideration excludes $10 billion for the Federal Emergency Management Agency and $1.95 billion for the Virginia-class submarine program, as sought by Democrats and Republicans respectively, but retains "$231 million in new appropriations for the Secret Service to provide protection for presidential candidates," per Roll Call.
It's a resounding yet predictable failure of one of Congress' most basic constitutional responsibilities: "to lay and collect taxes…to pay the debts and provide for the common defense and general welfare of the United States," as described in Article I, Section 8 of the Constitution.
When Johnson became Speaker of the House, he promised a return to "regular order"—the annual budget process established by the 1974 Congressional Budget and Impoundment Control Act.
But it has been 27 years since Congress has fully funded the federal government by October 1, reports Axios. In fact, not even half of the federal government has been funded on time since 1997.
It's pretty much guaranteed that Congress won't pass a single appropriations bill by October 1. Such a failure would not be an aberration but the "sixth year in a row" that Congress has done so, the Committee for a Responsible Budget (CFRB) laments.
According to the CFRB, Congress hasn't "had a real budget"—one conferenced by the House and Senate together—since the 114th Congress passed House Concurrent Resolution 27 for fiscal year 2016. The resolution provided a 10-year-long framework for federal spending, including a "point of order against increasing long-term deficits or direct spending"; subsequent reconciliation bills have included no such long-term plans and merely funded the short-term operations of the federal government.
Fully funding the government on time has long since stopped being the goal; that "has only happened four times in the 50 years of the current budgeting system," notes Axios. Instead, passing stopgap bills to avert a complete government shutdown is the norm.
With only a week left in the 2024 fiscal year, the House has passed exactly zero of the 12 appropriations bills. Legislators haven't even managed to pass the Legislative Branch Appropriations Act, which pays the salaries of congressional offices and funds the security and maintenance of the Capitol, never mind the rest of the federal government.
So much for an annual budget process.
The House GOP's budget headaches aren't new; lower chamber Republicans have struggled with the budget process for well over a decade. But they are telling.
Fundamentally, budgeting is a process of prioritization. There are no solutions; only trade-offs. The recurring failure to pass a budget shows that no one in Congress—and few in Washington, D.C.—seem to have any desire to make hard decisions.
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Collapse is inevitable. There’s good money to be made from big pharma and MIC investments on the journey there.
Yeah not sure bulking up on USDs is the best strategy. Gonna need gold and Bitcoin in the short term. Then we'll be back to trading tobacco and animal pelts.
Stop attacking Republicans you left-handed leftist marxist leftist leftists!
Blame Democrats!
Binary thinking.
Do you think he drinks himself blackout drunk and doesn't remember himself posting this shit over and over? Thinks it is clever every time?
Possibly. He’s also really stupid.
Why do you insist on slandering left handed humanoids?
Why wouldn't anyone?
Democrats are mostly ( by a 3-TIMES margin ) responsible for the over-whelming debt.
Do you want regular order or do you want any, even negligible, restraint on spending? Because it seems that you cannot have both.
"The recurring failure to pass a budget shows that no one in Congress—and few in Washington, D.C.—seem to have any desire to make hard decisions."
Yes, because hard decisions are more unpopular with some interest than they are popular with the others. And with the razor's edge majority in the House, strong unpopularity can mean the House flipping.
Also seems like you can't have either on its own, if recent history is anything to go on.
There will be no more regular order in Congress.
Give up on trying.
Not while there is a bunch of [Na]tional So[zi]alist[s] trying to STEAL to save their Nazi-Empire or I mean save their 'democratic' [Na]tional So[zi]alist Empire.
And Speaker Johnson just needs a simple majority for regular order - which the GOP has.
Obviously once again this is that evil witch Nancy Pelosi's fault. She has cast yet another spell on Repulbicans.
Schumer already stated he wouldn't even send a bill with items like SAVE act to the floor dumdum.
The GOP who voted no did so because it didn't cut spending. The dems who voted no did so to protect illegals from voting.
It's almost like the GOP reps each have a mind of their own.
I know weird right? They should all be sheep like Dems . Maybe if they added tons of pork to it.
"She has cast yet another SPEND-MORE stance on Republicans."
There; fixed that for you.
but retains "$231 million in new appropriations for the Secret Service to provide protection for presidential candidates,"
So just under 40 million per week, with one candidate in hiding.
Oh, wait. It might take a few weeks to determine the election winner, because of all those lawsuits and mail-in ballots and suitcases and everything.
>>Congress Fails the Budget Test, Again
I heard Congress gave themselves all A's
"Congress Fails the Budget Test, Again."
Well, what did you expect from the uni-party?
All of them had to pay off their cronies with our money.
Otherwise, they'd never would've gotten "elected."
If the Republicans weren't useless shits, they would say "fuck you, cut spending" and not pass anything until there were meaningful cuts agreed to. Make the people demanding the ever growing budget own it. Of course the problem is that most of the Republicans want it too.
Inflammatory Rhetoric: [They] cut spending on [insert pet project] by 50%!!
Reality: [They] agreed to only increase funding for [insert pet project] by X million dollars instead of by X * 2 million dollars.
Reminder: Spending cuts are only reductions in planned spending increases.
And they would be crucified by our Leftist press for all of it.
And?
While I would love to see that, any cut is killing grandma. Hell just holding the current spending level (not defilict ) is killing grandma by the dems
It would help if we shut down the democrat media so they can no longer wage a propaganda war against anyone opposing The Narrative.
Freedom to Fail.
Fourth tenet of Capitalism. It's it's so unprofitable/unproductive/self-destructive that it can't keep itself upright, the only answer is to let it fail. That's how we root out bad ideas, bad implementation, bad management, poor choices, etc.
Failure is a tool of learning. By depriving ourselves of it, we're depriving ourselves of that knowledge and experience. The problem is, we went the opposite direction and created a Welfare State - from personal to corporate - where nobody fails because everyone is special and deserves a hand. "The government must do for its people what they cannot do for themselves," is the old canard.
Look where it's gotten us.
Let it fail.
Sorry, but after more than 25 years, the budget dance is standard procedure. It’ll be the same until we get rid of Democrats and Republicans. Deal with it.
No no no. We just HAVE to vote for the duopoly ONE MORE TIME, because it's the MoSt ImPoRtAnT eLeCtIoN ever!!!!! They promise to fix everything this time, just give them one more chance!!!!!!!!!!!
For slippery slope election outcomes, Vote duopoly!
But you do t vote at all. So fuck off Drunky.
Kamala Harris ,.. evidence that she has become the product of the two party system. But she is not a piece of paper who can’t distinguish upon which side her thinness of substantially prevails more. She has a background and a thoughtful past as an attorney … https://www.bloomberg.com/features/2024-what-kamala-harris-presidency-looks-like/
Being a product of the two-party system, she does not seem likely to be one to change its obsession with “piling up debt that knows no limit.”
Notably, article invents a company that “cheats” but does instantly nothing to name a real example of the company itself nor the specific identifiers of this trickster foul.
So 25 yrs ago we could pass a budget acceptable to both sides. Now, it's so partisan they can't even do that.
Dems can't think for themselves
Reps (the stupid party) don't hold to their values or lip service
It shouldn't be an unreasonable expectation for a budget be passed, nor unreasonable to expect that the budget be balanced.
If they can't decide what to cut, then an across the board cut should be instituted to get to a balanced budget.
"but, but, but .... Trump hollowed out our public institutions!", straight from the DNC platform.
I don’t think Rubber-Stamping approval on UN-Constitutional spending = failing the budget test again.
It might actually be passing the honor-test of their sworn oath of office though.
So tell us again which part of the budget fits within the Enumerated Powers?