February 18

VIEW FROM AWAY: No breaks for Congress unless work is done

The Commercial Appeal

Congress likes to impose draconian consequences -- the fiscal cliff, sequestration, national default -- on itself, and unfortunately on the rest of us as well, for failing to do what it's supposed to do.

The latest such gimmick is the "no budget, no pay" proviso. The idea is that none of the lawmakers will get a paycheck until both the House and Senate pass a budget this year.

For the senators, it's not an idle threat because they haven't passed a budget in four years.

But the threat is somewhat mitigated because so many members of Congress are wealthy enough that they can get along without their government paycheck and, besides, they get all the money back at the end of the congressional session. No member will starve.

However, David Walker, a former U.S. comptroller general who leads the nonprofit Comeback America Initiative, has come up with a promising proposal to get the solons to do their work: "No deal, no break."

The public is generally unaware how much time off Congress takes. Walker notes it plans to adjourn for the equivalent of a full month this spring while we confront at least two critical deadlines: March 27, when the government faces a shutdown if temporary funding resolutions aren't renewed, and May 19, when the debt ceiling will rise. And the fiscal 2014 budget must be taken up whenever President Barack Obama sends his budget along. Plus, the lawmakers take a week off for every federal holiday and virtually all of August.

"The premise is simple," Walker says. "Stay in Washington and do your job and strike a meaningful fiscal deal that can restore fiscal sanity. And until that happens, don't recess."

Working at a job until it's finished -- what a novel concept.

-- The Commercial Appeal, Memphis, Tenn., Feb. 11

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