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 Outside the Beltway 

Bush Spending Money Like a Drunken Sailor

Bush nearly triples request for tsunami relief (Cox)

President Bush said yesterday he would ask Congress for $950 million for tsunami relief, nearly tripling U.S. aid pledged for victims of the monstrous seismic wave that swept the Indian Ocean in December. The beefed-up aid proposal, to be part of a supplemental budget request to go to Congress later this week, includes money to cover emergency relief efforts as well as new funding to help rebuild bridges, roads, schools and housing destroyed in a natural disaster that took some 150,000 lives.

In a statement, Bush said the money would help restore communities and rebuild “vital infrastructure that re-energizes economies and strengthens societies” in Indonesia, Sri Lanka, Thailand and other countries that bore the brunt of the tsunami’s wrath.

US plans $400m reward for allies (BBC)

US President George W Bush is asking Congress for $400m (£215m) to reward a number of countries that sent troops to Afghanistan and Iraq. A White House spokesman said the money would “assist nations which have taken political and economic risks”. The fund is part of a $80bn war funding request President Bush will send to Congress next week. [...] Poland, for instance, which has 2,500 troops in Iraq, will receive $100m. [...] The fund, called the Solidarity Initiative, will benefit countries “promoting freedom around the world”, Mr McClellan said in a statement. [...] Officials declined to say which other nations would benefit, but there has been suggestion that the fund will help to Eastern European nations, such as Ukraine, Hungary, Romania and the Baltic states.

These funds are going to good causes but one wonders how profligate our spending would be were we not experiencing record (in raw numbers, not real dollars or percentage of GDP) budget deficits.

About the Author: James Joyner is the publisher of Outside the Beltway and the managing editor of the Atlantic Council. He's a former Army officer, Desert Storm vet, and college professor with a PhD in political science from The University of Alabama. He lives just outside the Beltway in Alexandria, Virginia.

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Comments
 

Hey! I'll have you know I always try to get other people to buy me drinks, so by the time I'm drunk, I'm not spending any money!

Heh.

Posted by Boyd | February 10, 2005 | 02:50 pm | Permalink
 

Bush clearly has a loose-loose situation here. If you cut spending you are "hurting those who need the money the most." If you spend money on disaster relief then you are spending money like a drunken sailor.

Posted by The Doctor | February 10, 2005 | 03:09 pm | Permalink
 

James;
You may want to temper this a bit.
Consider; a goodly chunk of the increase is not in the form of cash, but is rather in the form of vouchers against the military and other resources already spent in the initial aid process.

Posted by Bithead | February 10, 2005 | 03:15 pm | Permalink
 

The budget is one of those areas where Bush is pretty weak, and always has been.

He needs to find his veto pen, but even more the GOP in congress needs to rediscover their fiscal conservative roots, and practice some restraint.

While Bush seems happy to spend, I don't see congress all that happy to control it either.

Posted by Just Me | February 11, 2005 | 09:37 am | Permalink
 

At Democratic National HQ, singing can be heard:

Ooooohhhh, throw him in the bilge and make him drink it....

Posted by LJD | February 11, 2005 | 10:33 am | Permalink
 

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