Proposals would cap spending
Alicia Robinson
Two of the area’s elected officials are calling a halt to the huge
spending increases proposed by the state and federal governments in
recent years.
U.S. Rep. Chris Cox and 70th District Assemblyman John Campbell
are backing spending caps for Congress and the state Legislature,
respectively.
Cox told members of the Conservative Political Action Conference
on Jan. 24 that he will introduce a constitutional amendment to
control federal spending. It would limit spending increases to the
previous year’s spending plus inflation and population growth. A
three-fifths vote in Congress would be required to approve additional
spending.
Last month, Campbell proposed a similar amendment to California’s
Constitution that would impose spending limits on the state
Legislature, keeping the budget to that of the previous year’s with
inflation and population growth added. Petitions will be circulated
to place the initiative on the November ballot.
Campbell’s proposal would set up a rainy day fund and limit how
much debt the state can incur.
If a spending limit had been in place under Gov. Gray Davis, the
state wouldn’t have a $14-billion deficit, Campbell said. During
Davis’ first term, spending increased 38% while state population only
rose by 21%, he said.
“When the Legislature sees money, it spends it,” Campbell said.
“This is an external discipline to force them to do what many of them
know is the right thing to do.”
Various polls have shown voter support for a cap on state
spending, Campbell said.
“I’ve never seen anything that doesn’t show a majority approval
among all voters for this, so all the voters get it that the
Legislature will just keep spending their money incessantly if we
don’t have some controls on it,” he said.
If past attempts to amend the U.S. Constitution are any
indication, Cox faces a tough battle for his spending limit. A
constitutional amendment requires a two-thirds vote of Congress and
ratification by three-fourths of the states’ legislatures.
More than 900 amendments have been proposed just involving the
electoral college, UC Irvine political science professor Mark
Petracca said.
“Dozens of amendments are proposed annually,” Petracca said. “They
just don’t go anywhere.”
The state and federal efforts to limit spending are the visible
results of rumblings among taxpayers and legislators that government
spending is out of control.
In his speech, Cox cited the growth of the federal budget from
$1.4 trillion in 1993 to more than $2 trillion today. President Bush
this week announced a $2.4-trillion budget proposal for the year.
Such increases in federal spending have given even Bush’s GOP
colleagues pause.
“I don’t think there’s any secret that there’s concern about
that,” Campbell said.
Petracca said it’s surprising to see a conservative such as Cox
proposing a constitutional amendment on a public policy issue.
“The idea of constitutionalizing this is still not a particularly
conservative thing to do because it takes discretion away from your
representatives,” Petracca said.
“[Cox] has come to the conclusion that neither Democrats nor
Republicans can be trusted to reduce the size and scope of federal
government,” he said.
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