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Lincoln Chafee on Budget & Economy
Independent RI Governor; previously Republican Senator (1999-2007)
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100-Day, 10-Point Economic Plan for RI development
100-Day Economic Plan--Chafee's economic development plan for his first 100 days in office:- 10-Point Plan--Chafee's 10-point plan to leverage the $125 million RI Loan Guaranty Fund in a way that maximizes job creation and minimizes taxpayer risk
- Historic Tax Credits--supports reinstating tax credits for certain cities and towns in the most distressed areas
- Runway Expansion--supports the expansion of the runway at T.F. Green Airport to the proposed 8,750 feet
Source: 2010 gubernatorial campaign website, chafeeforgovernor.com
, Nov 2, 2010
Reinstitute pay-as-you-go: match tax cuts & spending cuts
Q: Do tax cuts stimulate the economy?WHITEHOUSE: The Bush administration tax cuts have run up our budget deficit to the highest levels ever. We now owe nearly a trillion dollars to the Chinese government, much of which went to finance tax cuts for
the very richest Americans. If you are a middle-income Rhode Islander, and you got $1 of tax relief under the Bush tax cut, somebody making more than $200,000 got $111. That has not been good policy. We need to repeal the Bush tax cuts.
CHAFEE: I’m all
for tax cuts as long as we can cut our spending. The difficulty has been that we cut the taxes but we don’t cut our spending. We’ve had some tremendous unforeseen costs -- with 9/11, the war in Iraq & Afghanistan, and Katrina. I think we should prepare
for those, and I don’t believe tax cuts, as long as we’re not cutting our spending, is a wise course to take. During the 1990s, we had something called “pay as you go.” We would not enact any spending programs that we couldn’t pay for with revenue.
Source: 2006 RI Senate debate, by RIBA and WPRI-12 (Xref Whitehouse)
, Sep 13, 2006
Pork barrel accounts for 1% of the budget, and is requested
LAFFEY: I think of the $27 billion of pork barrel spending that goes on in this country every year and I think of how we could buy textbooks with it, how we could use the money for other more important purposes. Rhode Island does not benefit it because
while $150 million of pork barrel projects coming back to Rhode Island in the next four for five years, we had to spend $223 million to get the bridge to nowhere up in Alaska for 50 people. It’s a wrong policy.CHAFEE: $27 billion in a $2.5 trillion
budget, that’s 1% of the budget. If you’re saying I’m going down to reform all our financial problems, it’s in 1% of the budget. Every year I send a letter to every city and town, the town manager, the mayor, the president of the city council and ask
how can I help you in your neighborhoods? They write back, I then submit those requests to the subcommittee. That goes to the Senate full committee, then to the House. It gets signed by the President. Then it becomes law. So it’s a long process.
Source: 2006 R.I. Republican Senate Primary debate (x-ref Laffey)
, Aug 24, 2006
Voted NO on $40B in reduced federal overall spending.
Vote to pass a bill that reduces federal spending by $40 billion over five years by decreasing the amount of funds spent on Medicaid, Medicare, agriculture, employee pensions, conservation, and student loans. The bill also provides a down-payment toward hurricane recovery and reconstruction costs.
Reference: Work, Marriage, and Family Promotion Reconciliation Act;
Bill S. 1932
; vote number 2005-363
on Dec 21, 2005
Voted NO on prioritizing national debt reduction below tax cuts.
Vote to table [kill] an amendment that would increase the amount of the budget that would be used to reduce the national debt by $75 billion over 5 year. The debt reduction would be offset by reducing the tax cut in the budget framework from $150 billion
Reference:
Bill S Con Res 101
; vote number 2000-55
on Apr 5, 2000
Maintain & enforce existing spending caps in the future.
Chafee adopted the Republican Main Street Partnership issue stance:
What we offer today are not the precise spending decisions of a given year's budget; rather, we call upon the Congress and the nation to adopt the following guidelines for our fiscal policy over the next decade. This long-term blueprint is essential for maintaining both the immediate public-sector goal of balancing the budget and the private-sector goal of a healthy economy. This can be achieved through the following steps:
- A commitment to maintaining and enforcing existing spending caps in the future, when such discipline becomes more difficult to achieve;
- A careful and considerate re-definition of the federal role in society (what should be the legitimate and proper role of the federal government in the twenty-first century, and how do we prioritize competing demands?); and
- An evaluation of implementing tax cuts based on their social fairness.
Source: Republican Main St. Partnership Issue Paper: Fiscal Policy 98-RMSP5 on Sep 9, 1998
Page last updated: Nov 28, 2014