The Senate added to its recent string of conservative successes
on March 16 when it rejected an effort by Sen. Maria Cantwell
(D.-Wash.) to prevent oil and natural gas drilling on a tiny parcel
of the expansive stretch of frozen desert in Alaska known as the
Arctic National Wildlife Refuge (ANWR). Fifty-one senators,
including three Democrats, voted to keep the door open to drilling
in ANWR after a heated floor debate on Cantwell's amendment to the
annual budget resolution. (See roll call vote on
HumanEventsOnline.com.)
With this vote, the decades-long struggle to enhance America's
energy independence cleared a major hurdle. In the months ahead,
the energy committees in both the House and Senate are expected to
give oil firms the legislative green light to begin exploring and
developing the estimated 16-billion barrels of oil lying under the
frozen tundra. What has free-market energy experts contemplating
victory after two decades of trying is the likelihood that
congressional leaders will attach the ANWR legislation to so-called
"reconciliation" legislation. Reconciliation bills contain a mix of
provisions designed to meet the spending and revenue targets set
forth in the budget resolution. Reconciliation bills require only a
simple majority and are not subject to unlimited debate.
It's worth noting that the recent string of successes in the Senate
is directly attributable to conservative victories last November.
Senators Mel Martinez of Florida, Richard Burr of North Carolina
and Jim DeMint of South Carolina all replaced liberals who
steadfastly opposed oil and natural gas development in Alaska and
virtually everywhere else. Sen. John Thune (S.D.) replaced an ANWR
foe as well.
America's energy future hasn't looked this bright in many
years.
Holding the Line
With one major exception, new Senate Budget Chairman Judd Gregg
(R.-N.H.), managed to fend off a flurry of efforts by Senate
liberals to undermine what may be the most conservative budget in a
decade.
Gregg convinced his colleagues to turn back, on a nail-biter of a
50-50 vote, an effort by Sen. Russ Feingold (D.-Wis.) to restore a
Senate budget rule that would make it all but impossible to extend
President Bush's tax cuts. Gregg also held the line against efforts
to add billions in new spending on veterans, health research,
education, first responders and Amtrak. (However, in a St.
Patrick's Day surprise, Sen. Gordon Smith (R.-Ore.) was able to
rebuff the modest effort by Gregg and other reformers to rein in
runaway Medicaid spending.)
Throughout the weeklong debate over the 2006 budget, Gregg did a
splendid job of reminding his Senate colleagues of what was at
stake. Senate Democrats offered no formal alternative to the
Republican blueprint, Gregg pointed out, but an astute observer
could nevertheless piece together their overall vision for the size
and scope of government in 2006 and beyond by looking at the dozen
or so amendments Democrats offered during the Budget Committee's
markup.
"They did put forward a proposal," he insisted, "and it was your
classic tax-and-spend budget, $229 billion in new spending and...
potentially $270 billion in new taxes [over the next five years]."
Gregg then summed up the differences between the two parties: "You
cannot on one hand talk about need for fiscal responsibility when
on the other hand you are proposing $229 billion of new spending.
You cannot discipline the federal government by raising
spending."
Supplemental Antics
Budget watchdogs have grown increasingly frustrated by the tactic
of big spenders to classify even the most routine categories of
spending as "emergencies." Whenever this frustration surfaces,
however, the spenders note that the definition of what qualifies as
a real emergency is in the eye of the beholder.
The most recent round of frustration erupted when the President
sent Congress a request for more than $81 billion in additional
funding for operations in Iraq and foreign aid and asked that it be
classified as emergency spending.
In a carefully guarded report, however, the Congressional Budget
Office cast this spending in a new and less favorable light. The
report looked at how much of these so-called emergency funds would
actually be spent in the current fiscal year, how much next year,
and how much would be spent as far out as 2012.
According to the CBO, only $32.1 billion would actually be spent
on a fast-track basis in the current fiscal year, and most of that
would head to the Pentagon. The sheer magnitude of the so-called
"out-year" spending--the spending that would occur in 2006 and
beyond--caused many conservative budget experts to conclude that
the process had been abused.
More than $30 billion would be spent in 2006, another $13 billion
in 2007, $3.8 billion in 2008, $1.3 billion in 2009, and almost
$800 million in 2010 and beyond. The $6.3 billion in additional
foreign aid spending raised the most eyebrows, with over half being
spent in 2007 or later.
House leaders shaved some of this spending--almost entirely in the
foreign aid section--off its version of the bill. Once again, alas,
Congress appears willing to acquiesce in sidestepping a budget
process designed to provide limits on the unquenchable thirst for
spending. Mr. Franc, who has held a number of positions on Capitol
Hill, is vice president of Government Relations at The Heritage
Foundation.
Mr. Franc, who
has held a number of positions on Capitol Hill, is vice president
of Government Relations at The Heritage Foundation.
First appeared in Human Events