Issue Position: Budget/Taxes

Issue Position

Date: Jan. 1, 2014

Our National Deficit

Our country is facing very real financial challenges. The national deficit stands at over $16 trillion dollars. This high level of debt was created for several reasons, including the sharp drop in revenue over the past decade due to tax cuts enacted in 2001 and 2003, our recent economic downturn, the increased expenditures on security and defense in the aftermath of 9/11, and the growing number of Americans who are retiring and accessing services that protect seniors, such as Social Security and Medicare. With commonsense budgeting, shared responsibility, and a willingness to compromise, I am confident that our nation can find a way to return to a balanced budget.

Sequestration

As part of the original deal to raise the debt ceiling during the summer of 2011, Congress agreed to make $2.1 trillion in cuts over the next decade. Over $900 billion of these cuts were agreed to in the debt-ceiling bill but the remaining $1.2 trillion in cuts were still on the table. The bill required that if a deal could not be reached by March 1, 2013 then an automatic cut -- or "sequestration" -- of $110 billion would be split between national security and domestic programs per year through 2022.

Programs like Social Security, Medicaid, veterans' benefits, and pay for service members are exempt from sequestration cuts. However, the rest of the federal budget, including the remainder of the defense budget, education, and transportation, are experiencing sharp cuts and will continue to until Congress acts to reverse these cuts and create a plan to address our national debt.

Sequestration was suggested as a tool to force lawmakers to negotiate and find a compromise on debt reduction that both parties could support. It was not meant to be an effective or appropriate way to manage government expenditures. That is why I do not support sequestration. It is far more effective to cut out unnecessary waste and eliminate redundant programs than take a hatchet and cut hundreds of billions of dollars to essential services.

Unfortunately, until both chambers of Congress are able to find a compromise, sequestration will continue to have a devastating effect on our district, our state, and the country.

Tax Reform

Every year it seems that the U.S. tax code becomes longer and more complicated. I am a supporter of comprehensive tax reform and believe that reform should aim to simplify the tax code, promote savings, and give equal treatment to wages at the individual level. As a former small business manager, I believe businesses should also see benefits in tax reform solutions.

When comprehensive tax reform proposals are brought to the table, we must work to ensure that the result does not contain the same or worse flaws as the existing system or place new burdens on America's working families or businesses.

Small Business Incentives

Small businesses are the driving engine of economic growth and job creation in our nation. The Small Business Administration (SBA) reports that there are over 23 million small businesses in the United States, accounting for over half of all U.S. sales. It is absolutely critical that we continue to encourage and assist small businesses through access to easy credit, tax incentives, training programs, procurement, and more. I have supported initiatives like these and will continue to do so to ensure that small businesses have the tools and resources they need to develop and grow.


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