Centrist House Democrats signal openness to higher deficits to pass Biden’s plans

July 20, 2020

Our focus right now must be on addressing the public health crisis and stimulating our economy, which is why Congressman Scott Peters has been a strong advocate for automatic stabilizers. When our situation becomes more stable, we can continue working to address the national debt.

The full discussion is available in a July 20th piece forĀ NBC News, posted below:

Centrist House Democrats signal openness to higher deficits to pass Biden’s plans

By Sahil Kapur

July 20th, 2020

WASHINGTON ā€” The leaders of a group of fiscally conscious House Democrats say the coronavirus crisis has sidelined concerns about the national debt, potentially opening up room for Joe Biden to enact broad programs next year if elected president.

“This is an emergency. And getting bogged down in trying to identify offsets is not appropriate in an emergency,” Rep. Derek Kilmer, D-Wash., the chair of the centrist New Democrat Coalition, told reporters on a conference call Monday.

Centrist Democrats have exercised more leverage when their own party controls the White House and previously used their clout to reduce budget deficits. But with an ongoing health and economic crisis, Biden could move quickly to enact expensive proposals while the moderates in his party remain open to increasing the national debt.

Kilmer said the coalition is determined to solve problems “in a fiscally responsible way,” but that fiscal hawks agree on the need for new spending to address the “largest public health crisis over the course of modern history” and “the largest economic disruption since the Great Depression.”

Rep. Scott Peters, D-Calif., the group’s vice chair for member services, concurred: “Now is not the time to turn off the faucet.”

“We should be using our strong balance sheet to borrow to stimulate the economy. And that may involve more programs like climate and transportation going into the Biden administration,” Peters said.

The lawmakers were responding to a question from NBC News about whether the group of Democrats would insist on paying for all of Bidenā€™s new plans without adding more debt. The answers suggest that they may be willing to keep their concerns to the side if the crisis continues into 2021.

These Democrats view themselves as the party’s vanguards of fiscal responsibility and will have a voice in setting the scope of Bidenā€™s agenda if the party sweeps the 2020 election. They spoke as the two parties are on the cusp of negotiating a new coronavirus relief package with President Donald Trump to combat rising infections in many parts of the country. Congress has approved trillions of dollars in deficit-financed coronavirus relief this year.

The New Democrat Coalition boasts 104 members in the 116th Congress. Dozens of them are first-term lawmakers who put the party in the majority and are influential with House Speaker Nancy Pelosi.

Centrist Democrats played a role in shaping the ambitions of Barack Obama when he was president by demanding that many new spending initiatives not generate more debt, including the Affordable Care Act.

Last week, Biden rolled out a sweeping $2 trillion plan to address climate change and rebuild U.S. cities with clean energy investments. He has also proposed a $1.3 trillion infrastructure investment, among other spending plans and ideas to finance them.

Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., the runner-up for the 2020 and 2016 Democratic nomination contests, said on MSNBC this month that Biden would be “the most progressive president since FDR” if he enacts the policy recommendations of a joint task force set up by the two former rivals.

On the Monday call, Peters said Congress must be transparent about the fiscal impact of new programs it passes, and also suggested setting targets in order “to make sure that we do tackle the debt issue and the deficit issue when we get in better times.”

3.31.02

News

Peters called ā€œone of the more statesmanlike of our elected representativesā€

Young, old challenge San Diego's history of civic status quoBy Neil MorganSAN DIEGO UNION TRIBUNEMarch 31, 2002I welcome the tangy...

Paid for by Scott Peters for Congress

Share

California District 52

Is Scott your Representative in Congress?

Type in your address to find out.

You are in District 52!

For more ways to help, please check out the link below:

Get Involved

Not in this district!

According to our data, you are not in District 52! Please verify this information at the CA Dems website!

CA Dems

The data here is provided by 3rd-party services. For best results, please visit CA Dems