769 Days & Counting Since Senate Democrats Passed A Budget
It’s been 769 days since U.S. Senator Claire McCaskill (D-MO) and the Democrats who run the Senate have performed the most basic job function of Congress by passing a federal budget. In the current 112th Congress, McCaskill and the Democrats have yet to propose, much less pass, any budget.
As Americans continue to demand substantial action to address our country’s unsustainable debt-and-spending crisis, Democrats have attempted to defend their dereliction with a string of implausible excuses…
First, Senate Democrat Leader Harry Reid (D-NV) said it would be “foolish” to propose a budget. Then, the Senate Democrats’ designated communications guru Chuck Schumer (D-NY) complained that Democrats just don’t have the time to propose a budget.
Not to be outdone, Senate Democrat Whip Dick Durbin (D-IL) has offered yet a third excuse – asserting that Senate Democrats shouldn’t be expected to put forward a federal budget because they only have 53 votes in the chamber of 100. As Politico reported today:
“I think people also understand the Leader [Reid] faces a tough situation with 53 votes and a Republican House,” said Senate Majority Whip Dick Durbin. “It’s just not an easy year to engineer the outcomes you’d like to have.”
But McCaskill herself has yet to explain to Missourians why she believes it is acceptable for her and her fellow Washington Democrats not to fulfill this most basic responsibility of Congress – particularly after she was elected to the Senate by promising a balanced federal budget.
“We’ve heard a wide variety of excuses from Senator McCaskill’s Washington party bosses as to why she and the Democrats have failed to even propose, much less pass, a federal budget for 769 days. But McCaskill herself has yet to explain to Missourians why she thinks it’s acceptable for her and her fellow Democrats to ignore their most basic job responsibility while our national debt continues to skyrocket on the backs of Missouri families,” said National Republican Senatorial Committee (NRSC) spokesman Chris Bond.
Since The Democrat-Controlled Senate Last Passed A Budget, The Federal Debt Has Risen By An Additional $3.1 Trillion:
- On April 27, 2009, The National Debt Was $11.2 Trillion. (Treasury Direct Website, www.treasurydirect.gov, Accessed 6/7/11)
- Today, The National Debt Is Over $14.3 Trillion. (Treasury Direct Website, www.treasurydirect.gov, Accessed 6/7/11)




