Tribune wire report
WASHINGTON -- President
Barack Obama formally ordered broad cuts in government spending on
Friday night after he and congressional Republicans failed to reach a
deal to avert automatic reductions that could dampen economic growth and
curb military readiness.
As the United States staggered into
another fiscal crisis, the White House predicted that the spending cuts
triggered by the inability of Obama and lawmakers to forge a broader
deficit-reduction agreement would be "deeply destructive" to the
nation's economic and national security.
"Not everyone will feel
the pain of these cuts right away. The pain though will be real.
Beginning this week, many middle-class families will have their lives
disrupted in significant ways," Obama told journalists after his meeting
with Republican and Democratic congressional leaders.
Late on
Friday, Obama signed an order that put in effect the across-the-board
government spending cuts known as "sequestration." Government agencies
will now begin to hack a total of $85 billion from their budgets between
Saturday and October 1.
Half of the cuts will fall on the Pentagon. Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel said the reductions put at risk "all of our missions.
Congress and Obama could still halt the cuts in the weeks to come, but
neither side has expressed any confidence they will do so. Both
Democrats and Republicans set the automatic cuts in motion during
feverish deficit-reduction efforts in August 2011.
MARKETS SHRUG OFF CRISIS
Friday's events marked the first budget showdown in Washington of many
in the past decade that was not somehow resolved at the last minute -
often under pressure from rattled financial markets. Markets in New York
shrugged off the stalemate in Washington on Friday as they have for
months.
Democrats predicted the cuts could soon cause
air-traffic delays, meat shortages as food safety inspections slow down,
losses to thousands of federal contractors and damage to local
economies across the country, particularly in the hardest-hit regions
around military installations.
At the heart of Washington's
persistent fiscal crises is disagreement over how to slash the budget
deficit and the $16 trillion national debt, bloated over the years by
wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and government stimulus for the ailing
economy.
Obama wants to close the fiscal gap with spending cuts
and tax hikes. Republicans do not want to concede again on taxes after
doing so in negotiations over the "fiscal cliff" at the New Year.
Public outrage, if it materializes, would be the most likely prod for a
resolution as the impact of the spending cuts starts to be felt in the
coming weeks and months.
As a percentage of total government
spending every year, $3.7 trillion, the actual spending reductions are
small. But because safety-net programs such as Social Security and
Medicare will be untouched, the brunt falls mostly on federal government
employees rather than direct recipients of aid.
The U.S.
government is the nation's largest employer, with a workforce of roughly
2.7 million civilians spread across the country. If the cuts stay in
place, more than 800,000 of those workers could see reduced work days
and smaller paychecks between now and September.
Furlough
notices warning employees and their unions started to go out earlier
this week and the pace picked up on Friday after it became clear that
talks at the White House between Obama and congressional leaders would
be fruitless.
While the International Monetary Fund warned that
the belt-tightening could slow U.S. economic growth by at least 0.5 of a
percentage point this year, that is not a huge drag on an economy that
is picking up steam.
'THE SPENDING PROBLEM'
Many
Republicans accuse the Obama administration of overstating the effects
of the cuts in order to pressure them into agreeing to a solution to the
White House's liking.
A deal proved elusive as Obama met at the
White House with House of Representatives Speaker John Boehner, the top
Republican in Congress, and Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell,
as well as the top two Democrats in Congress, Senate Majority Leader
Harry Reid and House Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi.
"The discussion about revenue, in my view, is over. It's about taking on the spending problem," Boehner said after the meeting.
Asked why he did not just refuse to let congressional leaders leave the
room until they had a deal, Obama told reporters: "I am not a dictator.
I'm the president. So, ultimately, if Mitch McConnell or John Boehner
say, 'We need to go to catch a plane,' I can't have Secret Service block
the doorway, right?"
The across-the-board cutbacks were
mandated by a deficit reduction law, structured to be so disruptive that
Congress would ultimately replace them with more targeted savings. But
partisan gridlock has prevented agreement on where to save.
The
White House budget office sent a report to Congress detailing the
spending cuts. Some 115,000 employees of the Department of Justice -
including prosecutors and the FBI - were among the first to get the
official word of furloughs.
The government also sent letters to
several state governors advising them of cuts to services like the Head
Start education program in California and military facilities in
Virginia.
Canadian Finance Minister Jim Flaherty expressed rare
public frustration with the United States for lurching from crisis to
crisis.
One reason for the inaction in Washington is that both
parties still hope the other will either be blamed by voters for the
cuts or cave in before the worst effects predicted by Democrats come
into effect.
A Reuters/Ipsos poll released on Friday showed 28
percent of Americans blamed congressional Republicans for the
sequestration mess, 18 percent thought Obama was responsible and 4
percent blamed congressional Democrats. Thirty-seven percent blamed them
all, according the online poll.
The non-partisan Congressional
Budget Office predicts 750,000 jobs could be lost in 2013, and federal
employees throughout the country are looking to trim their own costs.
"The kids won't go to the dentist, the kids might not go to the doctor,
we won't be spending money in local restaurants, local movie theaters,"
said Paul O'Connor, president of the Metal Trades Council, which
represents 2,500 workers at the Portsmouth Naval Shipyard in Kittery,
Maine.
After weeks of White House warnings about the cuts
causing disruption, Obama acknowledged it might be a while before
effects fully kicked in. "We will get through this. This is not going to
be an apocalypse," Obama said.
In the absence of any deal at all, the Pentagon will be forced to slice 13 percent of its budget between now and September 30.
In his first Pentagon news conference since he was sworn in on
Wednesday, Hagel struck a more moderate tone than many other defense
officials who have said the spending reductions would be devastating or
could turn the U.S. military into a second-rate power.
"America
... has the best fighting force, the most capable fighting force, the
most powerful fighting force in the world," he said. "The management of
this institution, starting with the Joint Chiefs, are not going to allow
this capacity to erode."
Most non-defense programs, from NASA
space exploration to federally backed education and law enforcement,
face a 9 percent reduction.
Moving to head off a new budget
crisis later this month, Boehner said the Republican-led House would
move a "continuing resolution" to fund government through the rest of
the fiscal year, thus hopefully averting a government shutdown.
Reuters
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