WASHINGTON โ The 2012 elections will test whether Americans are serious about spending and deficit reduction, a problem thatโs โeither going to be resolved by Congress or itโll be resolved by our creditors,โ U.S. Rep. Randy Neugebauer, R-Lubbock, told The Texas Tribune during an interview in his Capitol office last week.
The conservative Neugebauer was one of five Texas Republicans this summer to vote against a deal to raise the national debt ceiling and create a so-called supercommittee, the panel of 12 lawmakers tasked with finding more than $1 trillion in decade-long deficit reductions by Nov. 23.
Now that the supercommitteeโs work is under way, the fifth-term congressman said he hopes Congress can achieve cuts that go beyond discretionary spending.
Neugebauer endorsed Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison when she challenged Texas Gov. Rick Perry in the Republican gubernatorial primary in 2010. But he threw his support to Perry before the governor jumped into the presidential race earlier this year and reiterated his endorsement to the Tribune.
On Thursday, after a new New York Times/CBS News poll showed just 9 percent of Americans approve of Congressโs job performance, Neugebauer sat down with the Tribune to talk agriculture policy, including cuts to direct payments that could be headed Texas farmers’ way; his hopes for the supercommittee, whose November deadline is looming; and why he and Perry are on the same page headed into 2012. Click the audio button above to hear a portion of the interview. The following is an edited and condensed transcript.
TT:ย What do you see as Congressโs ability to address the unemployment and uncertainty in the economy?
Neugebauer: Not much, because itโs really an economic issue, and so when you get Congress involved in it youโre trying to say itโs somewhat of a political issue. I think there are some things that have made this problem a lot worse than it is, and I think there are some things that Congress can do to kind of free up the market system to do that. I call it getting the government out of the way. About four years ago, I said we ought to hit the pause button up here and quit trying to fix all these things and really let the marketplace run its course. ย The thing about markets, and I think the thing people donโt understand about that, is markets are not kind, but theyโre very efficient. So when the marketplace determines an inefficiency in the system it corrects that, and a market system thatโs left alone will reward good behavior and punish bad behavior. When government steps in, we almost try to reverse that. We almost try to punish good behavior and reward bad behavior. I think when you look at some of the policies of this administration, you know, that plays itself out.
TT: What are you hearing from your constituents about what they want Congress to do? Do they support the measures the House Republicans are pushing?
Neugebauer: Yes. First thing they say is, โQuit spending so much money.โ By and large, thatโs โ people understand that you canโt continue to spend a dollar and borrow 40 cents. They get the spending piece, and I come from a very conservative district. People in my district really would love for government to be less of an influence. One of the things I hear a lot is just, โIf the government would just get out of my way a little bit I could move forward.โ But when they have Obamacare looming over them, youโve got a very aggressive [Environmental Protection Agency], youโve got uncertainty in the tax situation and then this Dodd-Frank and, you know, impact on capital. I mean, the list goes on and on, and time and time again I hear a lot of my constituents just say, โYou know, Iโm just sitting on the sidelines right now, Randy. โฆ I could probably hire some more people. I would like to expand my business. Iโve probably got some additional business out there, but I just donโt know what the rules are going to be, you know, moving down the road.โ
TT:ย Gov. Rick Perry, when he kicked off his presidential campaign, said he wanted to make Washington as โinconsequentialโย in peopleโs lives as he could. Does that sort of statesโ rights rhetoric make your job here in Washington more difficult, or are you on the same page in a lot of ways?
Neugebauer: I think weโre on the same page. Education is a great example, because the only way you can make federal policy for education is you assume that every student, every classroom, every school, every school district has the same issues, and we all know that thatโs not the case. So making education policy on a nationwide basis is โ I think the jury is out.
TT: Do you think that goes all the way to questioning the necessity of the Department of Education?ย
Neugebauer: I know it sounds radical but, really, where are the best decisions for students made? The best decisions for students are made in the classroom and at the local school district. The school district knows and the principal knows and the teacher knows the dynamics of the kids who are in this particular classroom. The people down the street here donโt know that and donโt understand it. That doesnโt mean I donโt believe there should be accountability, but isnโt the accountability really to the people, the residents of that state, rather than to a big bureaucracy here in Washington, D.C.?
TT:ย You serve on the Agriculture Committee. What did you think about recentlyย proposed agriculture cuts?ย
Neugebauer:ย I think what will have to be determined is, you know, then what? How do you divvy up that $23 billion? And I think that thereโs some discussions going on with Chairman [Frank] Lucas [R-Okla.] and the chairman of the ag committee in the Senate. But I think one of the things that everybody recognizes, and producers in Texas understand this, is that everybodyโs got to tighten their belt. What they say is, โRandy, you know, letโs do that fairly and letโs make sure that we leave in place farm programs that continue to make agriculture kind of one of the bright spots in the economy.โ And one of the things in the last few years, agricultural exports, has been one of the bright spots in the economy, so weโll see how those are broken out.
Weโve been very involved in crop insurance, and we introduced in the last farm bill a crop insurance bill that really begins to give producers a better risk management tool. It gives them more flexibility and helps them manage their individual risks. Weโve reintroduced that piece of legislation, and weโve offered that up as a solution as people are beginning to ascertain what part of the current farm program that might be reduced or, in some cases, possibly done away with, and if there are some things that you can trade out or replace it with that actually make it better but more cost effective.
TT: Back to spending cuts the supercommittee is working on: How difficult do you think it will be to deal with the supercommitteeโs recommendations right at the end of 2011 just as your committee starts work on a new farm bill in 2012?ย
Neugebauer: You would have a little bit of a period of time before these cuts go into effect. So one of the things Chairman Lucas has said, and I agree with, is, โHey, you all give us a number and then letโs use regular order.” Letโs go through the committee process, and letโs put together a farm bill thatโs within the restrictions given us by the supercommittee. … But, honestly, it still remains to be seen whether the supercommittee will actually be able to accomplish anything.
TT: How much information are you able to get about whatโs going on in there and whether theyโre making progress?
Neugebauer: U.S. Rep.ย Jeb Hensarling [R-Dallas, a supercommittee co-chairman] is a good friend of mine, but they made an agreement among the 12 that they wouldnโt talk out of school. It appears theyโve done a pretty good job of that, which is pretty remarkable up here. Because most of the time Iโll hear something in conference and before I can get out of conference itโs already up on the Internet somewhere.
So I think theyโve done a pretty good job of keeping that and I have reservations about that. I think we promised the American people weโd have a more open government here and Iโm not sure the best decisions get made behind closed doors. I think when thereโs some light on the issues that itโs a better process and so, I didnโt vote with the deal, and that was one of the reasons, is that I just wasnโt comfortable with this process.
TT: What do you hope that the supercommittee will accomplish?
Neugebauer: What they need to accomplish is weโve got to do something about spending in this country and it canโt be all around discretionary spending. We ran a $1.3 trillion deficit last year. Discretionary spending was $1.1 trillion, so if you eliminated all discretionary spending you would still have a $200 billion deficit. So what we do know is the fastest growth in government is really not in discretionary spending because, really. When you look at even the Bush years and discretionary spending was relatively flat, and of course when we got into the stimulus business and some of these other things, discretionary spending spiked up, but when you look at the real growth in government, itโs the Medicare. Itโs the Medicaid. Itโs the Social Security, and those are really the areas that we are going to have to go in and figure out how to change the flight plan of those issues.ย
TT: How will we see whether thereโs the political will, as you say, to fix the spending problem?ย
Neugebauer: I think it plays out in the election next year. I think theyโll have had a dose of supercommittee. I think weโll still be running these kinds of deficits next year. I think thatโs the projection: still over a $1 trillion deficit. Weโll see how the economyโs performing. Weโll see what the jobs numbers are.
The election in November of โ12 is really about if the American people are serious about this, and hereโs the problem. This problem will have to be resolved one way or the other. Itโs either going to be resolved by Congress or itโll be resolved by our creditors, just like itโs playing out in Europe and other places.ย
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