In constituent letter, Labrador defends rural schools vote

Days after publicly criticizing fellow Republican Rep. Mike Simpson in a dispute over rural schools funding. Rep. Raul Labrador took his case to constituents.

Raul Labrador
Rep. Raul Labrador

In an email to constituents Thursday, the 1st District representative elaborated on his decision to vote against a two-year extension of the Safe Rural Schools and Community Self-Determination Act. Labrador said he wasn’t opposed to Safe Rural Schools, which was worth $7.2 million to school districts in Idaho timber country in 2013-14. Labrador said he opposed attaching funding to an unrelated and “budget-busting” Medicare bill.

“I still believe the debt is the greatest threat to our national security and the future of our nation,” Labrador wrote. “As Republicans, we promised the American people that we would do everything in our power to battle this debt crisis.”

Here is Labrador’s letter, in full:

I was on the short end of a 392-37 vote last week on a budget-busting Medicare bill that adds at least  $141 billion to our deficit. Casting my “no” vote on H.R. 2 should have been easy. It’s consistent with one of the most important promises I’ve made to Idahoans: to fight at every turn to reduce our $18.1 trillion federal debt.

But tucked into this massive Medicare spending bill is an unrelated provision extending funding for the Secure Rural Schools (SRS) program. Passed as a stopgap to replace lost revenue from declining timber harvests on federal lands, SRS provides support to local government and schools in 35 Idaho counties. Rural counties are especially dependent on these funds.

I have long advocated a lasting replacement for SRS. We must reopen our federal forests to job-creating private-sector investment and empower rural communities to generate revenue from underutilized lands. In fact, I would have supported extending SRS funding in a stand-alone bill, or as part of relevant natural resources legislation. But attaching two years of SRS funding to a completely unrelated Medicare spending bill was unacceptable to me.

Why? Because I still believe the debt is the greatest threat to our national security and the future of our nation. As Republicans, we promised the American people that we would do everything in our power to battle this debt crisis.

The timing of the March 26 vote to add more debt is unsettling. On March 25, a GOP budget passed with promises to balance the budget in 10 years. Republican fiscal restraint lasted a single day.

The Congressional Budget Office estimates that H.R. 2 will increase federal deficits by $141 billion from 2015-2025. CBO says a “precise estimate is not feasible” for 2025-2035, but says the bill “would raise federal costs” over current law.  In addition, the bipartisan Committee for a Responsible Budget did issue an estimate for 2015-2035, saying the bill would add $500 billion to the debt.

Maya MacGuineas, president of CRFB, spoke in Idaho in 2012. She warned of the “fiscal cliff” facing America and called for bipartisan solutions that threaten future generations.

In announcing her group’s opposition to H.R. 2 last week, MacGuineas said, “When we call for bipartisanship, this isn’t what we mean. It’s easy to be bipartisan when adding to the debt. The parties need to come together to improve our unsustainable fiscal situation, not to worsen it.”

I won’t forget my promise to restore fiscal sanity. Continuing to kick the can down the road is irresponsible, wrong-headed and immoral. I simply won’t do it.

Kevin Richert

Kevin Richert

Senior reporter and blogger Kevin Richert specializes in education politics and education policy. He has more than 30 years of experience in Idaho journalism. He is a frequent guest on "Idaho Reports" on Idaho Public Television and "Idaho Matters" on Boise State Public Radio. Follow Kevin on Twitter: @KevinRichert. He can be reached at [email protected]

Get EdNews in your inbox

Weekly round up every Friday