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President Bush's FY 2009 Budget Proposal

February 4, 2008 03:32 PM

Below is the statement by AFT President Edward J. McElroy:

Note: President Bush released his FY 2009 budget proposal today. It eliminates or cuts many key education programs and slashes Medicare and Medicaid by almost $200 billion. The budget provides inadequate increases to Title I and special education, yet diverts $300 million to a new, unproven national voucher program and adds more than $100 million to a flawed teacher pay plan (the Teacher Incentive Fund). Overall, the budget essentially freezes domestic discretionary funding at current levels, which will result in cuts to most services after taking inflation and population growth into account. The budget now goes to Congress for its consideration and modification.

WASHINGTON, D.C.— The best news about President Bush’s budget is that it’s his last. Seven years of irresponsible tax cuts, bad economic policies and soaring military spending have landed the nation in a deep fiscal hole. The president’s FY 2009 budget proposal digs that hole deeper, increasing the deficit to $400 billion while saddling children, seniors and other vulnerable populations with the brunt of cuts
to vital public services. We urge Congress to reject this budget and put forth a plan that better reflects the nation’s values and priorities.

The silver lining is that once President Bush leaves office, we finally will have the opportunity to address the mess he has left behind—$9 trillion in debt, chronic revenue shortfalls, and shameful underinvestment in our nation’s schools, universities, infrastructure and healthcare services.

Recovering from this president’s mistakes will require bold, new leadership in 2009. The scope of the challenges ahead underscores the importance of electing candidates in 2008 who have the experience, know-how and commitment to tackle big problems and restore the American dream for millions of working families.

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The NCLB Blog was established by the AFT as a forum where public education advocates, policymakers and others can exchange information and express their opinions on NCLB and related issues. The views expressed here are not the official views of the AFT or any of its affiliates. All claims otherwise would violate the spirit and purpose of the blog. © American Federation of Teachers, AFL-CIO. All rights reserved. Photographs and illustrations cannot be used without permission of the AFT.