Conservative group raises concerns about potential budget deal

Click:ydroxyethyl cellulose HEC

A prominent conservative group is raising concerns about a potential budget deal that would raise spending caps and suspend the debt limit.

The Club for Growth is taking issue with the fact that a budget agreement could lead to an increase in the debt at a time when debt and deficit levels are already high. The group’s comments come after the Office of Management and Budget estimated that the deficit will be about $1 trillion this year.

“Congressional Leadership continues to aggressively pursue spending agreements that propel our country toward bankruptcy and fiscal crisis,” Club for Growth President David McIntosh said in a statement Friday. “President TrumpDonald John TrumpCould Donald Trump and Boris Johnson be this generation’s Reagan-Thatcher? Merkel backs Democratic congresswomen over Trump How China’s currency manipulation cheats America on trade MORE will be running for reelection with an annual deficit over $1 trillion and without Congress having made any progress on America’s staggering national debt, which exceeds $22 trillion.”

ADVERTISEMENT

McIntosh added that the Club for Growth has been encouraged by people in the Trump administration who are interested in reining in deficits, but that “too many in Congress, especially those in Leadership, have no intention of showing fiscal restraint.”

Treasury Secretary Steven MnuchinSteven Terner MnuchinHow China’s currency manipulation cheats America on trade The Hill’s Morning Report: Trump walks back from ‘send her back’ chants Trump faces new hit on deficit MORE said Thursday that he and House Speaker Nancy PelosiNancy PelosiDHS chief to Pelosi: Emergency border funding ‘has already had an impact’ The Hill’s Morning Report: Trump walks back from ‘send her back’ chants Trump faces new hit on deficit MORE (D-Calif.) have reached an agreement on the top-line numbers for defense and nondefense discretionary spending for a two-year budget deal. 

Mnuchin said that the administration and congressional leaders are still discussing what amount of spending cuts and revenue raisers would be included in the package to help pay for the agreement.

The Trump administration is pushing for about $150 billion in offsets to be included in the deal. The White House sent Capitol Hill a list of offsets on Thursday night.

A Democratic source close to the talks said that the White House’s list is a “starting point for negotiations on this aspect,” and that the administration understands that those levels are “nonstarters” for Democrats. Discussions about offsets remain ongoing.

The Committee for Responsible Federal Budget (CRFB), a budget watchdog group, said in a statement Friday that any budget deal shouldn’t add to the debt.

“Now is the chance for Congress to show they can support federal investments and national security without abandoning fiscal responsibility and leaving the bill for future generations,” CRFB President Maya MacGuineas said.

Click Here: Cheap kid backpacks