In other words, [The Super Congress] probably leads us to a stalemate: Democrats cannot do much better unless there are tax increases, and Republicans will not be eager to raise taxes. So the automatic cuts embodied in the trigger are quite likely to go into effect — and those are the sorts of cuts that Democrats, not Republicans, would prefer to make to the budget.
Which, if you compare the Super Congress agreed to, to what the Dems wanted, this Super Congress actually gets them closer to their goal than their own plan, which I think was designed to protect entitlements like Medicare ect... by making the commissions' proposal have no teeth.
Now, the Super Congress will have teeth and, by design, failure to approve their measures results in the deepest defense budget cuts democrats are likely to get. In lieu of tax increases....slashing the defense budget will easy the financial pressures on the government most dramatically. Even if the Republicans take 2012, dems should be able to defeat any proposals from the Super Congress which spare the defense budget at the expense of other programs.
What stops this from being a total win for the Republicans is that their positioning for legislative and executive control of budget policy in 2012 may have actually backfired, depending on how closely you hold the party to its support of defense spending. They didn't get their constitutional amendment, they didn't get another debt ceiling vote to being the elections with, and they've agreed to substantial defense spending cuts tied to automatic triggers. As a democrat, the spending cuts so far feel equitable on paper and if they stay that way, Congress might have actually managed to please everyone while pleasing no one specifically.
What government program calls anything improving blacks rights anymore? I thought we all agreed to beat around the bush and consider them generic urban youth improvement programs.
Urban development, I'm guessing. And federal backing for Affirmative Action measures. The chart, if I read it right, is basically presented from a democrat point of view, illustrating how far from democrats Republicans are on each issue.