This article was published by the Center for American Progress.
By Ruy Teixeira
Conservatives are on the rampage about cutting government spending. But their proposed cuts leave the military largely untouched while taking a meat axe to nonmilitary discretionary spending—that is, spending on areas such as education, energy, the environment, and poverty. As usual, conservative priorities are backward when compared to public opinion.
In a fascinating new survey the Program for Public Consultation conducted, respondents were asked to make their own cuts (or increases) to a projected discretionary budget for the year 2015 with a $625 billion deficit. The top three areas for cuts were defense ($109 billion average cut), intelligence agencies ($13 billion), and Iraq/Afghanistan ($13 billion)—the very areas conservatives are going light on.
I sincerely hope some of the conservative budget cutters on Capitol Hill actually read this study. It should give them some second thoughts about their current plans if they care at all about what the public thinks.
Ruy Teixeira is a Senior Fellow at the Center for American Progress. To learn more about his public opinion analysis go to the Media and Progressive Values page and theProgressive Studies program page of our website.
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