House Passes cut, cap and balance the Federal budget
July 19, 2011 in Debt Crisis by carlos
The bill imposes caps on federal spending as a percentage of GDP. It also allows for an increase in the debt ceiling by $2.4 trillion in exchange for both the Senate and House approving a balanced budget amendment.
House Speaker John Boehner played a muted role in public during the day, but later applauded the passage of the plan.
“House Republicans are the only ones to put forward and pass a real plan that will create a better environment for private-sector job growth by stopping Washington from spending money it doesn’t have and preventing tax hikes on families and small businesses,” he said in a statement. “The White House hasn’t said what it will cut.”
But nine Republicans voted no on the plan, including Rep. Michele Bachmann, R-Minn. and Rep. Ron Paul, R-Texas. Five Democrats sided with Republicans.
“I have never voted to raise the federal debt limit, and I have no doubt that we face financial collapse and ruin if we continue to grow our debt,” Paul said in a statement. “We need to make major spending cuts now, in this budget, and we can no longer afford to allow more deficit spending based on promises of future cuts.”
The plan is under a veto threat by Obama amid predictions that it won’t make it through the Senate.
Meanwhile, President Obama on Tuesday urged lawmakers to pick a “clear direction” within the next couple days on how to raise the debt ceiling and cut deficits, praising a bipartisan group of senators for putting a renewed budget plan on the table while criticizing House Republicans for pushing a separate proposal he said will not pass.
“We don’t have any more time to engage in symbolic gestures. We don’t have any more time to posture,” Obama said.
According to the White House, Obama plans to once again summon congressional leaders for a meeting on the way forward. Speaking to reporters briefly Tuesday afternoon, the president warned that lawmakers are now “in the eleventh hour” and need to start “talking turkey” about crafting actual legislation that has a chance at passing.
He seemed to urge lawmakers to use the so-called “Gang of Six” plan as a new starting point for a “broader agreement,” claiming it overlapped with his general goals for a deficit-reduction deal.
That plan seeks to extract nearly $4 trillion in deficit reduction over the next decade through a combination of tax increases and spending cuts. A group of 50 senators gathered Tuesday for more than an hour to hear from the reunited so-called “Gang of Six” — a group of three Republicans and three Democrats which led discussions before breaking apart in the spring.
Their deficit-reduction plan has already won the support of the Senate’s No. 3 Republican, Sen. Lamar Alexander of Tennessee, and cautious optimism from one of the Obama administration’s toughest critics, Sen. Tom Coburn, R-Okla.
Click here to read the Gang of Six plan obtained by Fox News.
Senate Democratic Leader Harry Reid called the balanced-budget proposal “the stupidest constitutional amendment I’ve ever seen.”
Republicans fiercely defend the cut, cap and balance proposal, noting that they’ve done more than Obama in putting a plan on the table.
“The president continues to say that he wants to do big things. We do as well. We put forward our big plan and vision in our budget,” House Republican Leader Eric Cantor said. “But we implore the president — let’s do big things, let’s go ahead and get our fiscal house in order. But let’s do so without imposing higher taxes on the small business people that we need so desperately to start hiring again.”
Providing for consideration of the bill (H.R. 2560) to cut, cap, and balance the Federal budget
FINAL VOTE RESULTS FOR ROLL CALL 606
(Republicans in roman; Democrats in italic; Independents
underlined)
H R 2560 RECORDED
VOTE 19-Jul-2011 8:23 PM
QUESTION: On
Passage
BILL TITLE: Cut, Cap, and Balance Act
| Ayes | Noes | PRES | NV | |
| Republican | 229 | 9 | 1 | |
| Democratic | 5 | 181 | 7 | |
| Independent | ||||
| TOTALS | 234 | 190 | 8 |
—- AYES 234 —
| Adams Aderholt Akin Alexander Amash Austria Bachus Barletta Bartlett Barton (TX) Bass (NH) Benishek Berg Biggert Bilbray Bilirakis Bishop (UT) Black Blackburn Bonner Bono Mack Boren Boustany Brady (TX) Brooks Buchanan Bucshon Buerkle Burgess Burton (IN) Calvert Camp Campbell Cantor Capito Carter Cassidy Chabot Chaffetz Coble Coffman (CO) Cole Conaway Cooper Cravaack Crawford Crenshaw Culberson Davis (KY) Denham Dent Diaz-Balart Dold Dreier Duffy Duncan (SC) Duncan (TN) Ellmers Emerson Farenthold Fincher Fitzpatrick Flake Fleischmann Fleming Flores Forbes Fortenberry Foxx Franks (AZ) Frelinghuysen Gallegly Gardner Garrett Gerlach Gibbs Gibson Gingrey (GA) |
Gohmert Goodlatte Gosar Gowdy Granger Graves (GA) Graves (MO) Griffin (AR) Grimm Guinta Guthrie Hall Hanna Harper Harris Hartzler Hastings (WA) Hayworth Heck Hensarling Herger Herrera Beutler Huelskamp Huizenga (MI) Hultgren Hunter Hurt Issa Jenkins Johnson (IL) Johnson (OH) Johnson, Sam Jordan Kelly King (IA) King (NY) Kingston Kinzinger (IL) Kline Labrador Lamborn Lance Landry Lankford Latham LaTourette Latta Lewis (CA) LoBiondo Long Lucas Luetkemeyer Lummis Lungren, Daniel E. Manzullo Marchant Marino Matheson McCarthy (CA) McCaul McClintock McCotter McHenry McIntyre McKeon McKinley McMorris Rodgers Meehan Mica Miller (FL) Miller (MI) Miller, Gary Mulvaney Murphy (PA) Myrick Neugebauer Noem Nugent |
Nunes Nunnelee Olson Palazzo Paulsen Pearce Pence Petri Pitts Platts Poe (TX) Pompeo Posey Price (GA) Quayle Reed Rehberg Reichert Renacci Ribble Rigell Rivera Roby Roe (TN) Rogers (AL) Rogers (KY) Rogers (MI) Rokita Rooney Ros-Lehtinen Roskam Ross (FL) Royce Runyan Ryan (WI) Scalise Schilling Schmidt Schock Schweikert Scott (SC) Scott, Austin Sensenbrenner Sessions Shimkus Shuler Shuster Simpson Smith (NE) Smith (NJ) Smith (TX) Southerland Stearns Stivers Stutzman Sullivan Terry Thompson (PA) Thornberry Tiberi Tipton Turner Upton Walberg Walden Walsh (IL) Webster West Westmoreland Whitfield Wilson (SC) Wittman Wolf Womack Woodall Yoder Young (FL) Young (IN) |
—- NOES 190 —
| Ackerman Altmire Andrews Baca Bachmann Baldwin Barrow Bass (CA) Becerra Berkley Berman Bishop (GA) Bishop (NY) Boswell Brady (PA) Braley (IA) Broun (GA) Brown (FL) Butterfield Canseco Capps Cardoza Carnahan Carney Carson (IN) Chandler Chu Cicilline Clarke (MI) Clarke (NY) Clay Cleaver Clyburn Cohen Connolly (VA) Conyers Costa Costello Courtney Critz Crowley Cuellar Cummings Davis (CA) Davis (IL) DeFazio DeGette DeLauro DesJarlais Deutch Dicks Dingell Doggett Donnelly (IN) Doyle Edwards Eshoo Farr Fattah Filner Frank (MA) Fudge Garamendi Gonzalez |
Green, Al Green, Gene Griffith (VA) Grijalva Gutierrez Hahn Hanabusa Hastings (FL) Heinrich Higgins Himes Hinojosa Hirono Hochul Holden Holt Honda Hoyer Inslee Israel Jackson (IL) Jackson Lee (TX) Johnson (GA) Johnson, E. B. Jones Kaptur Keating Kildee Kind Kissell Kucinich Langevin Larsen (WA) Larson (CT) Lee (CA) Levin Lewis (GA) Lipinski Loebsack Lofgren, Zoe Lowey Luján Lynch Mack Maloney Markey Matsui McCarthy (NY) McCollum McDermott McGovern McNerney Meeks Michaud Miller (NC) Miller, George Moore Moran Murphy (CT) Nadler Napolitano Neal Olver Owens |
Pallone Pascrell Pastor (AZ) Paul Payne Pelosi Perlmutter Peters Peterson Pingree (ME) Polis Price (NC) Quigley Rahall Rangel Reyes Richardson Richmond Rohrabacher Ross (AR) Rothman (NJ) Roybal-Allard Ruppersberger Rush Ryan (OH) Sánchez, Linda T. Sanchez, Loretta Sarbanes Schakowsky Schiff Schrader Schwartz Scott (VA) Scott, David Serrano Sewell Sherman Sires Slaughter Smith (WA) Speier Stark Sutton Thompson (CA) Thompson (MS) Tierney Tonko Towns Tsongas Van Hollen Velázquez Visclosky Walz (MN) Wasserman Schultz Waters Watt Waxman Welch Wilson (FL) Woolsey Wu Yarmuth |
—- NOT VOTING 8 —
| Blumenauer Capuano Castor (FL) |
Ellison Engel Giffords |
Hinchey Young (AK) |





