Plus, California's coming tax windfall
By Yuval Rosenberg and Michael Rainey
Trump Puts Democrats in a Bind with Request for Border Billions
Democrats face a quandary over President Trumpâs request for $4.5 billion in additional border funding. âHouse Democrats are in no mood to simply hand over the cash after condemning Trumpâs anti-immigrant rhetoric and policies over the past two years,â Politicoâs Sarah Ferris and Heather Caygle [report](. âThey also donât want to ignore a mounting humanitarian crisis.â
The money in question wouldnât be for Trumpâs promised wall along the border with Mexico. The administration says it needs more funding to shelter and care for a surging number of migrants coming to the United States and address the growing humanitarian needs. Some of the money would be used for border security, including an increase in the number of detention beds.
Democrats are split on how to respond. Some argue that the administration canât be trusted or worry about being seen as validating Trumpâs claim of a security crisis, even as they want to address the developing humanitarian one.
âDemocrats contend that the president brought this housing crisis on himself with his push to [scoop up as many noncitizens as possible]( rather than prioritizing those considered dangerous, as previous administrations did,â The New York Times explains in an [editorial](. âInstead of asking for more money, Democrats assert, ICE should redirect existing resources to the border.â
The Times editorial suggests that the White House would have been wise to set aside its request for more money for detention beds, a hot button issue. Nevertheless, it urges Democrats to relent, arguing that âuntil better policies are in place, Democrats need to find a way to provide money for adequate shelterâ â and that both sides should look to avoid blame-game politics and be flexible in trying to solve the problems at hand.
But the complicated politics at play wonât make that easy. âThe resultâ of the Democratsâ intraparty divide, Ferris and Caygle write, âis likely to be a weeks-long battle within the Democratic Caucus that will expose deep splits on immigration and complicate Washingtonâs next big funding fight. And with Trump gearing up for his reelection campaign, the issue is only going to get hotter.â
Chart of the Day: Seeing the Big Picture on Health Care Costs
âThe health care services that rack up the highest out-of-pocket costs for patients aren't the same ones that cost the most to the health care system overall,â [says]( Axiosâs Caitlin Owens. That may distort our view of how the system works and how best to fix it. For example, Americans spend more out-of-pocket on dental services ($53 billion) than they do on hospital care ($34 billion), but the latter is a much larger part of national health care spending as a whole.
The Biggest Hurdle to an Infrastructure Deal
President Trump confirmed over the weekend that he was considering a large-scale infrastructure plan that Democrats said they had discussed last week. In a tweet Saturday, Trump [wrote](
âThere is nothing easy about a USA Infrastructure Plan, especially when our great Country has spent an astounding 7 trillion dollars in the Middle East over the last 19 years, but I am looking hard at a bipartisan plan of 1 to 2 trillion dollars. Badly needed!â
The tweet contained mixed messages, simultaneously affirming a great national need for infrastructure investment while reducing the putative value of the theoretical package from the $2 trillion Democrats announced to a range of â1 to 2 trillion dollarsâ and citing high military spending as a potential fiscal constraint.
Trumpâs tweet echoes the central issues critics have been debating since House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) and Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY) [first announced]( the potential deal last week: how big it should be, what it should do and how to pay for it. The Hillâs Naomi Jagoda and Niv Ellis [rounded up]( some of the latest comments:
A key Democrat said that tax increases may be unavoidable: âItâs $200 billion a year, so thatâs not an easy pay-for. I donât know how youâd do it without raising taxes,â said Rep. John Yarmuth (D-KY), chair of the House Budget Committee. âIf we can find a way to pay for it, or pay for a substantial portion of it, I think itâs a great goal to have.â
Other Democrats said infrastructure should be paid for in full: âI think it should be fully offset,â said Rep. Dan Lipinski (D-IL), a member of the centrist Blue Dog Caucus. âTransportation and infrastructure has always been done by user fees, and I continue to support doing that.â
While some Democrats noted that there are plenty of ways to pay for it: âThere are so many ways to pay for infrastructure,â said Rep. Pramila Jayapal (D-WA), a leader of the Congressional Progressive Caucus (CPC). âFrom a wealth tax to a financial transactions tax, thereâs all kinds of specific, documented ways in our CPC budget that we propose paying for that,â she said.
Others said that infrastructure is worth borrowing to pay for: âI want us to have an honest conversation about what itâs going to take to pay for it and not start with the idea that we take debt off the table,â said Rep. Dan Kildee (D-MI). âWe borrow money to buy a house, but we have the asset of the house so we donât really fret with the amount of debt associated with it. We have to look at infrastructure as an asset.â
A budget watchdog said it could be paid for over time: âInterest rates are still pretty low, so it doesnât need to be paid for in year one,â said Marc Goldwein, of the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget. At the same time, the package would have to be paid for eventually, since in Goldweinâs view, deficit-financed infrastructure doesnât pay for itself (though others [disagree]( and âwe canât just keep adding $2 trillion at a timeâ to the national debt.
But several Republicans made clear that they have no interest in raising taxes:
- âNo, I wouldnât raise taxes,â Sen. Steve Daines (R-MT) said last week. âThatâs going to be the heaviest lift of all of this, is figuring out a way here from a fiscal viewpoint making this affordable on our current balance sheet.â
- âYou would have to have a gas tax to do it, and weâre not for a gas tax,â Rep. Mark Meadows (R-NC) said Thursday. âI mean, $1 trillion you could maybe do; $2 trillion, there is no way to get the money other than raising taxes and there is not an appetite for an increase in taxes by Republicans in the House or the Senate.â
- âIâm certainly not in favor of any type of tax increase, no gas tax increase. That would be a bad idea, and $2 trillion is an unbelievable amount of money, particularly when weâve got a $20 trillion debt,â said Rep. Jim Jordan (R-OH), a member of the conservative House Freedom Caucus.
In the end, GOP support may hinge on Trump: âWe know we can spend the money,â said Rep. Tom Cole (R-OK). âPeople will be delighted to spend the money on roads and bridges and inland waterways and ports and rural broadband, no problem. But the part of the discussion that's lacking is, how are you going to pay for it?"
Cole added, âI think enough Republicans could support something like that if the president were for it.â The problem for now, though, is that Trump hasnât taken a clear position on the issue. âI donât know what the president is for. He hasnât told us,â Cole said.
Our deepest condolences go out to the family and friends of [Stan Collender]( The Budget Guy, who died Friday at age 68. Regular readers of The Fiscal Times know we often relied on his unflinching analysis of budget matters. He will be missed.
California Set for Tax Windfall from Big Tech IPOs
At least six California-based companies worth more than $1 billion are expected to go public this year, Adam Beam of the Associated Press [reports]( and those IPOs will likely create a surge of tax revenue for the state.
The companies include Uber, Slack and Airbnb, and their initial offerings could provide a boost to Californiaâs $200 billion annual budget â although it doesnât really need one right now, Beam says, since the state is running a projected $21 billion surplus this year under Gov. Gavin Newsom (D).
Itâs hard for state officials to predict exactly how much tax revenue the IPOs will produce, given the large number of investors involved. When Facebook went public in 2012, the state took in about $1.3 billion â most of that from founder Mark Zuckerberg.
Whatever the final number, lawmakers will be faced with the decision of whether to spend it now or save it for the next downturn, Beam says. âFrom a state budget perspective, major IPOs are a bit like rainbows,â said H.D. Palmer of the California Department of Finance. âThey are lovely to watch but they donât last for very long.â
News
- [Trump Threatens China With More Tariffs Ahead of Final Trade Talks]( â New York Times
- [Trump Slams Puerto Rico as Congress Considers Disaster Aid Bill]( â USA Today
- [Schumer Blasts Trump Over Puerto Rico Aid]( â The Hill
- [Once Again, Trump Tweets Misleading Data on Puerto Rico Aid]( â Bloomberg
- [âThe Colony Within the Colonyâ: Puerto Rico Fumes as FEMA Deliberates over Remote Hospital]( â Washington Post
- [Groups Urge Congress Not to Revive 'Zombie' Tax Breaks]( â The Hill
- [Trump May Redefine Poverty, Cutting Americans From Welfare Rolls]( â Bloomberg
- [States Aren't Taking Up the Trump Administration's Offer of Obamacare 'Relief']( â Washington Post
- [Booker Backs 'Medicare for All' but Pledges 'Pragmatist' Approach]( â Politico
- [Bennet: Medicare for All Supporters 'Need to Level with the American People']( â Politico
- [IRS Says It's Reviewing Concerns About 'Free File' Program]( â The Hill
- [Wyoming Sen. Mike Enzi Won't Run for Reelection]( â Politico
- [A Boat Crushed His Face. Then Plastic Surgeons Hit Him With $167,000 in Medical Costs]( â Kaiser Health News
- [Michigan Budget Tussle Is About More Than Increasing Gas Tax]( â Associated Press
- [Newsom Wants Companies Collecting Personal Data to Share the Wealth with Californians]( â Los Angeles Times
Views and Analysis
- [Infrastructure Bill Might Be a Bad Use of $2 Trillion]( â Ramesh Ponnuru, Bloomberg
- [All the Infrastructure Weeks, Ranked]( â Jeva Lange, The Week
- [Creating 'MAGA Bonds' Could Be the Key to Funding US Infrastructure Needs]( â Bradley Blakeman, The Hill
- [Meet the Man Who Helped Create One of the Best Public Pension Plans in America]( â Sunny Oh, MarketWatch
- [Iâm Running to Save Capitalism]( â John Hickenlooper, Wall Street Journal (paywall)
- [Gov. Gavin Newsom Faces a Big Political Test as He Shapes His First California Budget]( â John Myers, Los Angeles Times
- [Retired for 2 Years, Harry Reid Finally Concerned About Debt]( â Las Vegas Review-Journal Editorial
- [The $100 Trillion Question: What to Do About Wealth?]( â Robert J. Sameulson, Washington Post
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