Author Topic: McCain Touts Plan to Balance Budget, Create Jobs, Help Workers  (Read 524 times)

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McCain Touts Plan to Balance Budget, Create Jobs, Help Workers
by FOXNews.com
Monday, July 7, 2008
 
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John McCain is promising to balance the ballooning federal budget by 2013 as he further promotes his jobs and economic plan in the face of a struggling U.S. economy.

McCain intends to do so by chopping out wasteful spending — a hallmark of his political identity — and targeting what is known as “the third rail”: Social Security and other entitlement programs that are about half of government spending, according to a 15-page policy paper distributed by the McCain campaign on Monday.

“In the long term, the only way to keep the budget balanced is successful reform of the large spending pressures in Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid,” reads the policy paper.

Watch John McCain speak live at 2 p.m. ET on FOXNews.com

The campaign also suggests it could start dropping war costs, and start paying for debts that have accumulated since 2001.

“The McCain administration would reserve all savings from victory in the Iraq and Afghanistan operations in the fight against Islamic extremists for reducing the deficit. Since all their costs were financed with deficit spending, all their savings must go to deficit reduction,” reads the McCain paper.

McCain and Barack Obama continue to discuss economic policy this week, promoting rival plans on housing, jobs, taxes and energy as U.S. home foreclosures continue to rise and fuel costs hover at record highs.

In excerpts of a speech to be delivered in Denver later Monday, McCain blasts both Congress and the Bush administration for its excess spending.

“This Congress and this administration have failed to meet their responsibilities to manage the government,” the speech reads, calling an eight-year, 60 percent growth in government “simply inexcusable.”

In the speech, McCain vows to “veto every single bill with wasteful spending. We aren’t going to continue mortgaging this country’s future.”

Earlier this year, McCain had backed off a balanced-budget pledge — pushing it back to the end of a would-be second term.

Politico.com reported that Obama economic adviser Jason Furman called McCain’s plan “preposterous.”

Citing Congressional Budget Office figures, Furman told the Web site that with an estimated annual deficit of $443 billion by 2013, a number that incorporates extending tax cuts pushed by President Bush, McCain would have to cut discretionary spending, including defense funding, by about one-third.

“McCain would have to pay for all of his new tax cuts and other proposals and then, on top of that, cut an additional $443 billion from the budget — which is 81 percent of Medicare spending or 78 percent of all discretionary spending outside defense,” the Politico quoted Furman saying.

The Obama campaign also pushed back against another criticism on the tax issue, distributing an analysis from Factcheck.org of Republican claims that Obama “voted 94 times for higher taxes.” The Web site says the claim is misleading, and Obama has “voted consistently to restore higher tax rates on upper-income taxpayers, but not on middle- or low-income workers.”

In an effort to blunt criticism from his Democratic opponent, McCain rolled out a statement signed by 300 economists.

“It is a comprehensive, pro-growth, reform agenda,” the statement from the economists reads. “The reform focuses on the real economic problems Americans face today and will face in the future. And it builds on the core economic principles that have made America great.”

In addition to McCain’s pledge on earmarks, the economists touted McCain’s support on several issues: a line-item veto, pausing non-military discretionary spending for one year, cutting the corporate tax rate to 25 percent, eliminating the alternative-minimum tax, simplifying the tax system, and broadening international trade.

The economists also lauded McCain’s call to double the tax credit for dependent children from $3,500 to $7,000.

McCain also is expected to acknowledge the steep drop in U.S. jobs in remarks and confront the issue with a can-do spirit of pledging to lower taxes.

And he will restate his support of free trade, while noting it “is not a positive for everyone.” He is promising to retrain workers who lose their jobs to overseas plants, and repeating his call to build at least 45 new nuclear plants, which he says “will create over 700,000 good jobs to construct and operate them.”

The political environment is tough for Republicans, with Bush’s approval rating at low levels as the U.S. teeters economically and fights terrorists in Afghanistan and Iraq. National polls vary widely, but they have one common point: Nearly all show Obama ahead of McCain.

Click here to read the analysis of Obama tax policy on Factcheck.org.

Click here to read the report in the Politico.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

http://elections.foxnews.com/2008/07/07/mccain-touts-plan-to-create-jobs-help-workers/