GOP budget plan offers big changes to social safety net

WASHINGTON -- House Republicans on Tuesday unveiled a budget that would fundamentally alter the social safety net, repeal President Obama's health care law, cut billions in spending and overhaul the federal tax code in order to reduce — but not eliminate — the federal deficit over the next 10 years.

Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan, R-Wis., said the proposal was philosophically rooted in reducing Americans' reliance on the federal government. "It's about turning our system that has become a dependent culture into an upward mobile society, getting people back onto lives of self-sufficiency," he said.

The budget resolution is non-binding and will not become law, but it offers a stark contrast to the fiscal blueprint offered by Obama this month, most notably on health care and taxes, and stands to reignite the debate over the best fiscal path forward in the United States.

Democrats intend to use Ryan's budget to campaign against candidates from the presidential to the congressional level, particularly on the GOP's broad endorsement of a plan to alter the structure of Medicare for future beneficiaries.

Ryan acknowledged and dismissed the political risks of voting on a non-binding proposal for sweeping changes to popular programs in an election year. "If we simply operate based on political fear, nothing is ever going to get done," he said. The House Budget Committee he chairs will debate the bill this week and a vote is expected on the floor before Congress adjourns for the Easter holiday.

Whoever wins the Republican nomination for president will largely embrace the House GOP budget, Ryan said. "We do believe that our nominee, whoever this person is going to be, is going to be perfectly consistent with this," he said. "I've spoken to all of these guys, and they believe that we are heading in the right direction."

Mitt Romney and Rick Santorum did not immediately comment on Ryan's budget. Newt Gingrich praised it as "a serious adult effort" to balance the budget in a radio interview and Rep. Ron Paul, R-Texas, criticized the proposal on the grounds it does not go far enough or move fast enough to reduce the deficit. Paul has proposed his own budget that seeks deeper spending cuts and the elimination of five Cabinet departments.

The highlights of the Ryan's "Path to Prosperity" budget include:

•Changing Medicare to allow future beneficiaries under the age of 55 to opt out of the system and instead receive federal money to purchase private health care on a Medicare exchange.

•Changing the Medicaid program to a block grant system giving states more control.

•A full repeal of Obama's health care law.

•Spending cuts that would affect a range of programs, from farmers' subsidies to federal college loans.

•Tax proposals to eliminate tax breaks and consolidate the current six individual tax brackets to two: a 10% and 25% bracket and a reduction of the corporate tax rate to 25%.

Democrats see their biggest political advantage in the Medicare proposal, which is a scaled back version of last year's House-passed Ryan budget that would have revamped the entire entitlement program to instead give seniors a stipend to buy private insurance.

The new language is based on legislation introduced last year by Ryan and Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., to give seniors a choice between traditional Medicare or to purchase private coverage. The White House has called the Ryan-Wyden approach as a back-door attempt to weaken Medicare, and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., told reporters that he spoke Tuesday morning to Wyden about inclusion of his bill on the broader GOP budget. "He doesn't like the budget," Reid said.

House Democrats believe they have the political upper hand in debating Medicare because the program remains highly popular and Democrats are running broadly as its defenders. A July 2011 poll conducted by the Pew Research Center showed 88% of Americans believe the entitlement program has been good for the country. After the Republican-controlled House passed a similar bill last year, Democrats won a special election in an Upstate New York district long held by Republicans with a campaign that focused on Ryan's Medicare plan. They said they intend to do it again in competitive House races this year. Senate Democrats are campaigning on the issue as well. "We will aggressively hold Republicans accountable for their wrong priorities," said Rep. Steve Israel, D-N.Y., who runs the House Democrats' campaign operation.

The Republican budget proposal puts Congress on another collision course this year over the annual spending bills. As part of the deal to raise the federal debt limit last summer, House Republicans and Senate Democrats agree to $1.047 trillion in discretionary spending for the upcoming fiscal year. But the Ryan plan calls for only $1.028 trillion in discretionary spending, and the House plans to pass spending bills at the lower level.

That will set up another struggle with the Senate later in the year.

The original number, House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, said Tuesday, was a limit, not a hard line.

Democrats on Tuesday expressed anger at what they view as walking away from an agreement. "I think what happened is they made a deal, and they can't keep the deal," said Minority Whip Steny Hoyer, D-Md., who added that he expects "overwhelming opposition" to the budget from Democrats.