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While the political debate in the U.S. is focused on who will be the next speaker of the House, what it will mean for next year's election, and Republican disarray in general, too little attention is being paid to Congress's failure to do its main job: approving a budget for the federal government.
Congress did not follow its own process and pass appropriations bills in time for the new fiscal year on Oct 1. Instead, at the last possible moment, it passed a stopgap measure that essentially allows the government to keep doing what it has been doing, extending funding for existing programs for another 45 days.
Congress did not consider the pros and cons of various programs. Members did not pore over the thousands of pages of agency budget requests to consider whether each government agency has a coherent plan to provide services that the public both wants and benefits from. They did not look at the U.S. fiscal situation to decide how to balance spending and revenue. They did not consider the growing entitlement programs that leave most government spending outside of the annual budget process.
What Congress did, essentially, was give itself an extension on its homework. It has also given its members a platform to rail against out-of-control spending and growing government debt, even as its actual actions have no impact on either.
It is tempting to argue that Congress has recently become broken, unable to perform one of its most important functions as outlined in the appropriations clause of the Constitution: writing and passing laws that dedicate (or "appropriate") money for specific purposes. In reality, however, Congress is late on these bills all the time. In the past 50 years, it has passed a budget on time only four times.
And not only is Congress chronically late, but it also fails to follow the schedule for a sensible budget process that Congress itself created. The debate over how much the federal government should spend should start almost a year before a new budget is needed. The first deadline, which Congress usually misses, is passing a budget resolution by April 15. The budget resolution is not binding, nor is it signed into law — it is simply an agreement between the House and Senate on how to proceed.