- Jul 28, 2006
- 18,161
- 7
- 0
If you want to know why Republicans refuse to look at raising taxes then here is your answer.
Twice in the past Republicans struck a deal with the Democrats that involved immediate tax increases in return for long term spending cuts and BOTH times the spending cuts didn't happen.
The 1990 Bush deal is the best example of this happening.
The promise:
http://www.nationalreview.com/articles/269397/read-my-lips-won-t-happen-again-ryan-ellis
Twice in the past Republicans struck a deal with the Democrats that involved immediate tax increases in return for long term spending cuts and BOTH times the spending cuts didn't happen.
The 1990 Bush deal is the best example of this happening.
The promise:
Reality:In October of 1990, Pres. George H. W. Bush agreed to a five-year, $137 billion tax increase. In exchange, House speaker Tom Foley (D., Wash.) and Senate majority leader George Mitchell (D., Me.) promised to cut spending by $274 billion over the FY19911995 period. In total, this $2-for-$1 deal was supposed to cut the budget deficit by $411 billion over this budget window.
You can read the rest at the link below. But the key points are already quoted.The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) projected before the deal that 19911995 spending would total $7.07 trillion. In fact, total spending for this period was $7.09 trillion. In other words, in return for agreeing to tax hikes, Republicans got $22 billion in extra spending rather than the promised $274 billion in cuts. This was despite the fact that there was another spending cut deal in 1993 the Clinton tax-increase budget.
http://www.nationalreview.com/articles/269397/read-my-lips-won-t-happen-again-ryan-ellis