THE HILL
 
comment
Print

Vulnerable House Republicans double down on Ryan budget

By Cameron Joseph - 03/29/12 03:36 PM ET

Most House Republicans stuck with their party and doubled down on a budget crafted by House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan (R-Wis.) that would dramatically reshape Medicare while introducing large tax cuts.

Ten Republicans voted against this year's GOP budget, up from four last year, and most of the new defections seem to be from the right, not the center, of the GOP conference; few Republicans facing tough races bucked their party on the vote.

The 10 Republicans who voted against the GOP Budget are Reps. Justin Amash (Mich.), Joe Barton (Texas), John Duncan (Tenn.), Chris Gibson (N.Y.), Tim Huelskamp (Kansas), Walter Jones (N.C.), David McKinley (W.Va.), Todd Platts (Pa.), Denny Rehberg (Mont.) and Ed Whitfield (Ky.).

Rehberg, McKinley and Jones voted against last year's GOP budget as well — Rehberg and McKinley said the Medicare changes were too dramatic, while the libertarian Jones argued the bill didn't go far enough with cuts to government. 

Rehberg is running for the Senate in a state with a large senior citizen population, while McKinley represents a district with many seniors and a fiscally populist streak.

This time the centrists were joined by Gibson, a moderate who faces a tough race this fall, and Platts, a centrist who is retiring this year and has been criticized by right-wing groups in the past.

The other Republicans who voted against the bill come from safely Republican districts and seem to have voted against the bill from the right — many of them voted for the more conservative alternate budget proposed by the Republican Study Committee.

Rep Ron Paul (R-Texas) is on the presidential campaign trail and did not return for the vote.

Democrats blasted Republicans for backing last year's House GOP budget and wasted no time doing the same this year. The Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee (DCCC) immediately sent out press releases targeting Republicans in tough races.

"Representative Sean Duffy (R-Wis.) has once again chosen to side with millionaires and billionaires and end the Medicare guarantee that Wisconsin seniors paid a lifetime to earn,” said DCCC spokesman Jesse Ferguson in one statement. “Duffy’s misplaced priorities would raise seniors’ health care costs to protect millionaires, Big Oil, and companies that ship American jobs overseas. Wisconsin voters will remember Duffy’s vote to end Medicare and will hold him accountable.”

Republicans who've taken heat for last year's vote were put in a tough position: either vote again for a similar measure and take additional heat, or vote against a more centrist bill and risk being called a flip-flopper. Most chose to double down rather than flip.

— Updated at 4:21 p.m. and 4:29 p.m.


Source:
http://thehill.com/blogs/ballot-box/house-races/219111-vulnerable-house-republicans-double-down-on-ryan-budget

More Videos »

Polls
Ballot Box Twitter - Click to follow
More From The Web
bloglogo

More Briefing Room »

More Congress Blog »

More Pundits Blog »

More Twitter Room »

More Hillicon Valley »

More E2-Wire (Energy) »

More Ballot Box »

More On The Money »

More Healthwatch »

More Floor Action »

More Transportation »

More DEFCON Hill »

More Global Affairs »

More In The Know »

More RegWatch »

Get latest news from The Hill direct to your inbox, RSS reader and mobile devices.