Pelosi: Gov't Spending Problem 'Almost a False Argument'
To say that the federal government has a spending problem is "almost a false argument," House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.)
Republicans also complain that when they agree to both spending cuts and tax increases, the tax increases usually occur but the spending cuts do not. Indeed, last week The Washington Post reported that a large portion of the spending cuts that were agreed to in April, 2011, were not real spending cuts but accounting gimmicks. The Census Bureau was credited, for instance, with cutting $6 billion for not doing a census in 2011, which it was not going to do anyway.
On CNN's "Fareed Zakaria GPS" Sunday, liberal economist Paul Krugman suggested that Obama offer Republicans "vague spending cuts" and "real revenue sources" to avoid the sequester. He also lambasted conservatives for misrepresenting what liberals want. Their belief that liberals want bigger government is "imaginary," he said.