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For those keeping track of the comings and goings of Washington DC, you recently saw an agreement to continue to fund the government for 45-days.
On the one hand, it is good that an agreement was reached. Many would have been hurt and our security would have been put more at risk if a resolution to continue funding the government at fiscal year 2023 levels was not passed. On the other hand, there is a major problem – we are not having the debate.
We must have the debate – a debate on the size, scope, and purpose of our government; the United States’ role in the world; and the deficit – rather than lurching from crisis-to-crisis. Such a debate would not only bring more efficacy to our governance, but it would also bring more legitimacy to our government and political system.
Yet, a substantive debate on the issues did not unfold during the recent continuing resolution process. Rather, if there was any form of debate, it was about process, pure politics, and theatrical in nature.
Further missed in much of the commentary surrounding this recently passed resolution to continue to fund the government was a dialogue of what it all means for our system of government.
Why was a continuing resolution needed in the first place?
A continuing resolution is required to continue the functions of government because Congress has not taken up and passed all twelve of the appropriations bills. The House has only considered a handful on the House floor, and the Senate has considered none on the floor to date.
What does this suggest about our legislative process?
The government has been annually appropriated through what is termed an omnibus bill, which pulls all 12 appropriations bills into one giant piece of legislation and is voted on once. Those in opposition to the recent continuing resolution argued that Congress should no longer pass omnibus bills. It should instead take up the twelve appropriations bills individually so that elected members can debate the merits of each program in a “regular order” process, which is DC-speak for the legislative process we learned in civics as kids. This would be a notable change because there is only one bill that annually follows something close to regular order: the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA).
The NDAA has passed for 62 years in a row – the so-called “do-nothing” Congress does do something. Both chambers annually pass this comprehensive piece of national security legislation that not only addresses the US Department of Defense but, increasingly, other national security agencies of government such as the State Department, Department of Energy, and others. It is a herculean effort to develop, write, conference, and pass the NDAA through regular order each year (believe me, I was part of it as a House Armed Services Committee staffer). But through regular order, the NDAA gains bipartisan support.
The NDAA achieves this bipartisan support because debates – thousands of them – occur through the regular order process. At every step of the development of the NDAA, arguments are made, negotiations occur, and differences are hashed out. This allows members of Congress – from both sides – to have a program-by-program opportunity for input.
Therefore, instead of the policy question being: “should we have a Department of Defense?”, the critical policy questions become more manageable, more reasonable, more nuanced, and more measured: “should we authorize program X to do Y or Z?” Regular order enables Members (and staff) to consider each governmental program, in conjunction with the President’s budget request, and in relation to their policy objectives. This not only makes for better legislation but also better policy.
45-days from now, Congress will have to consider another continuing resolution, or the government will shutdown. But, in the same 45-days, the rancor will be louder; the mistrust will be greater; the process will be even more complex with the motion to remove the Speaker of the House, unresolved Ukraine aid, and continued disagreements over border security and immigration.
Congress may well get through the continuing resolution process again in 45 days but not through a substantive debate. Rather, it will be through framing each side of the debate; characterizing the motives of each side; procedural and process-based tactics to advantage one party, one side, one faction over the other; and adjusting positions not through substantive dialogue and negotiation but through expediency given the impending deadline.
Instead of doing this yet again, I say…
Let’s have the debate.
Alex Gallo is the author of “Vetspective,” a RallyPoint series that discusses national security,
foreign policy, politics, and society. He is also a fellow with George Mason University’s National Security Institute, an adjunct professor in the Security Studies Program at Georgetown University, and a US Army Veteran. Follow him on Twitter at @AlexGalloCMP.
On the one hand, it is good that an agreement was reached. Many would have been hurt and our security would have been put more at risk if a resolution to continue funding the government at fiscal year 2023 levels was not passed. On the other hand, there is a major problem – we are not having the debate.
We must have the debate – a debate on the size, scope, and purpose of our government; the United States’ role in the world; and the deficit – rather than lurching from crisis-to-crisis. Such a debate would not only bring more efficacy to our governance, but it would also bring more legitimacy to our government and political system.
Yet, a substantive debate on the issues did not unfold during the recent continuing resolution process. Rather, if there was any form of debate, it was about process, pure politics, and theatrical in nature.
Further missed in much of the commentary surrounding this recently passed resolution to continue to fund the government was a dialogue of what it all means for our system of government.
Why was a continuing resolution needed in the first place?
A continuing resolution is required to continue the functions of government because Congress has not taken up and passed all twelve of the appropriations bills. The House has only considered a handful on the House floor, and the Senate has considered none on the floor to date.
What does this suggest about our legislative process?
The government has been annually appropriated through what is termed an omnibus bill, which pulls all 12 appropriations bills into one giant piece of legislation and is voted on once. Those in opposition to the recent continuing resolution argued that Congress should no longer pass omnibus bills. It should instead take up the twelve appropriations bills individually so that elected members can debate the merits of each program in a “regular order” process, which is DC-speak for the legislative process we learned in civics as kids. This would be a notable change because there is only one bill that annually follows something close to regular order: the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA).
The NDAA has passed for 62 years in a row – the so-called “do-nothing” Congress does do something. Both chambers annually pass this comprehensive piece of national security legislation that not only addresses the US Department of Defense but, increasingly, other national security agencies of government such as the State Department, Department of Energy, and others. It is a herculean effort to develop, write, conference, and pass the NDAA through regular order each year (believe me, I was part of it as a House Armed Services Committee staffer). But through regular order, the NDAA gains bipartisan support.
The NDAA achieves this bipartisan support because debates – thousands of them – occur through the regular order process. At every step of the development of the NDAA, arguments are made, negotiations occur, and differences are hashed out. This allows members of Congress – from both sides – to have a program-by-program opportunity for input.
Therefore, instead of the policy question being: “should we have a Department of Defense?”, the critical policy questions become more manageable, more reasonable, more nuanced, and more measured: “should we authorize program X to do Y or Z?” Regular order enables Members (and staff) to consider each governmental program, in conjunction with the President’s budget request, and in relation to their policy objectives. This not only makes for better legislation but also better policy.
45-days from now, Congress will have to consider another continuing resolution, or the government will shutdown. But, in the same 45-days, the rancor will be louder; the mistrust will be greater; the process will be even more complex with the motion to remove the Speaker of the House, unresolved Ukraine aid, and continued disagreements over border security and immigration.
Congress may well get through the continuing resolution process again in 45 days but not through a substantive debate. Rather, it will be through framing each side of the debate; characterizing the motives of each side; procedural and process-based tactics to advantage one party, one side, one faction over the other; and adjusting positions not through substantive dialogue and negotiation but through expediency given the impending deadline.
Instead of doing this yet again, I say…
Let’s have the debate.
Alex Gallo is the author of “Vetspective,” a RallyPoint series that discusses national security,
foreign policy, politics, and society. He is also a fellow with George Mason University’s National Security Institute, an adjunct professor in the Security Studies Program at Georgetown University, and a US Army Veteran. Follow him on Twitter at @AlexGalloCMP.
Edited 2 y ago
Posted 2 y ago
Responses: 25
In this same debate, we also need to discuss the funding of the NDAA along with the need to evaluate necessary versus unnecessary expenditures. The taxpayers deserve better accountability of where their money is being spent.
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One possible way to stop this nonsense is to actually NOT pay Congresspersons during any gap. And NOT restore that lost pay. Those Congresspersons are not affected by a paycheck suspension. They are not living paycheck to paycheck. To really affect them their pay must be permanently removed for lack of acceptable work.
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CPT (Join to see)
I understand what you're thinking, but not paying a politician is going to turn the reasonably (uhh) honest representative into a money grubbing mercenary.
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At least the speaker debacle is behind us. I still do not expect congress to step up and do its job to manage the budget, but one can hope.
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It is like we charge things in our credit card and when the bill comes due we decide not to pay the bill. A one stupidity. Stop spending like there is no tomorrow and the bill won’t come due. Any 10 year old gets this but not the Congress.
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I have more than a small suspicion that there is little if any difference between Democrat's and Republicans *in practice*.
I agree, they need to have the debate.
I agree, they need to have the debate.
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MAJ Byron Oyler
When you see how well the Bushes and Obamas get along out of office and how they all ganged up on non-politician Trump it is very clear their similarities. They all hated on Trump because he was not in with politicians.
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First off it's not the Senate's responsibility to formulate spending bills as that is the constitutional mandate of the House. If they send a Bill to the Senate and the Senate doesn't like it then the Bill goes to the Conference Committee to work out the issues so both houses can pass the legislation .
Yet with this group of republicans currently in office who could not elect a Speaker When they took the House and has spent what little time in session going after Hunter Biden instead of doing the governments business. As it stands to day after kicking out the crap of a House SPEAKER they have yet to elect one thus hamstring the US House to the delight of Russia, China, Hamas, North Korea and what other advisories we have. Our Allies are looking at us as a bunch of fools who cannot be trusted.
Another CR will be passed that will expire sometime in January because the Republicans in Charge of the House are not going to disrupt their Thanksgiving or Christmas holidays. Their vacations are more important than the need to do their job. In fact you can expect a continuation of government funding at the present level until after the 2024 Election. This is a safe bet and I'm 99.95 sure of it. In other words no budget till possibly March 2024 at the earliest baring WWIII.
Yet with this group of republicans currently in office who could not elect a Speaker When they took the House and has spent what little time in session going after Hunter Biden instead of doing the governments business. As it stands to day after kicking out the crap of a House SPEAKER they have yet to elect one thus hamstring the US House to the delight of Russia, China, Hamas, North Korea and what other advisories we have. Our Allies are looking at us as a bunch of fools who cannot be trusted.
Another CR will be passed that will expire sometime in January because the Republicans in Charge of the House are not going to disrupt their Thanksgiving or Christmas holidays. Their vacations are more important than the need to do their job. In fact you can expect a continuation of government funding at the present level until after the 2024 Election. This is a safe bet and I'm 99.95 sure of it. In other words no budget till possibly March 2024 at the earliest baring WWIII.
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CPT (Join to see)
SGT (Join to see) - Of course Hunter and ... others should be executed if guilty of selling out the security of the United States for filthy lucre. If they were true believing Communists, I could be moved towards life at USP ADX Florence because that's not an easy row to hoe. But for money, no way Jose'.
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What Is the U.S. National Debt Right Now — and Why Is It So High?
See the latest numbers and learn more about the causes of our high and rising national debt.
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While I don't disagree with Cpt Durish, I must say that this debate, argument, fight (verbal) does need to happen, it is likely the only way to get to where we can have discussions that enable us to a result which is palatable by both sides. Unfortunately we are not battling on two side, we are battling on four and even five. Each party needs to control there internal narrative before we can get to a strong willed debate, otherwise we will continue with chaos.
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remember Iraq under Donald Rumsfeld. There was 32 million dollars unaccounted for. Was there a hearing on that. No! I have never heard a lucid argument on what happened to that money. It is the same in every war we poke our nose in. The US sends tons of money until the going gets tough and then take our ball go home.
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What the hell is regular order? It prevents the congress from taking tough votes. That is what they are there for. Every time these knuckle heads come on TV it always regular order this and regular that. They are experts at avoiding real issues and correcting them. It is sad that our government is becoming the biggest joke in the world.
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