Romney and Moore look to tame $34 trillion U.S. debt
Jan 10, 2024, 4:48 PM | Updated: May 29, 2024, 12:25 pm
(AP Photo/Mary Altaffer)
SALT LAKE CITY — Sen. Mitt Romney, R-Utah, and Rep. Blake Moore, R-Utah, are weighing in on the U.S. debt and what their colleagues in the House and Senate can do about it.
The U.S. debt today is roughly $34 trillion. The U.S. government paid $76 billion in interest costs in October, up 77% from the $43 billion tab in October 2022, according to CNN.
Net interest costs soared to $659 billion in fiscal year 2023, which ended September 30. That’s up $184 billion or 39% from the previous year, according to the Treasury Department, CNN reports.
Congress is facing two deadlines coming up fast:
- Veterans programs, transportation, housing, agriculture, and energy departments are funded through Jan. 19, while funding for eight other appropriations bills, including defense, expires Feb. 2, according to CBS News.
Romney on U.S. debt
Romney has teamed up with West Virginia Democrat Sen. Joe Manchin to craft the Fiscal Stability Act, which would establish a commission charged “with finding legislative solutions to stabilize and decrease” the $34 trillion debt.
The commission would be bipartisan, Romney said, and it would develop a plan to move the nation toward a balanced budget and reduce the debt and the deficit every year.
“We’re spending almost as much on interest on the debt as we spend on our military. How are we going to keep up with China — and Russia for that matter — if we’re spending as much on interest as we do on our military? It’s unthinkable,” Romney said.
Making major fiscal changes in an election year, he told KSL NewsRadio, can be difficult. Especially with the leading presidential candidates from both main parties resisting making changes.
“Both President Biden and former President Trump want to say ‘Oh, we don’t want to change anything. We don’t want to change any of the spending programs.’ But we’ve got to. We’ve got to change our revenues and our spending. We cannot continue to add massive more debt to our national balance sheet or the implications for the future are dire,” Romney said.
Rep. Moore exasperated with budgeting
Rep. Blake Moore, who represents Utah’s 1st Congressional District, said he is frustrated with the budgeting process in Congress because members can only operate within about a quarter of the budget; the rest of the spending automatically is sent along to mandatory programs.
“It’s one of the most unorganized, confusing processes that exist,” Moore said. ” . . . right now, we only actually budget on one-fourth, maybe a little under 30% of all money spent. That’s just the appropriation side.
“The direct spending or the mandatory spending is over 70 percent of the budget, and we actually don’t even legislate on it for the most part, on a consistent basis. These are things like Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid. Big programs, welfare programs.
“Like all of that has to be in the process. You can’t just look at one-fourth of your budget and say you’re doing something, and that’s the big frustration that I’ve had back here,” Moore said.
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