McCain Freeze Would Chill ScienceBy Jeffrey Mervis
ScienceNOW Daily News
19 September 2008
WASHINGTON, D.C.--Next year's federal budget may not contain a penny more for research and education if Republican Senator John McCain (AZ) is elected U.S. president and has his way with Congress. An aide to the McCain campaign delivered that sober fiscal message today to science lobbyists, who pressed him unsuccessfully for leeway in the candidate's promise to curb federal spending by imposing a 1-year freeze on domestic discretionary spending.
"The purpose of the freeze is to evaluate each and every program, looking at which ones are worthwhile and which are a waste of taxpayer dollars," Ike Brannon, an economist and senior policy adviser to McCain, told the Task Force on the Future of American Innovation at a private gathering in Washington, D.C. The task force, a coalition of scientific and professional societies, had heard a more upbeat message in July from aides for Democratic Senator Barack Obama (IL), who has proposed doubling over 10 years the budgets of a host of U.S. science agencies.
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Brannon said today that there's been no talk within the campaign of allowing any flexibility in the proposed freeze. It would be part of McCain's 2010 budget submission next spring to Congress for the fiscal year that begins in October 2009, should he defeat Obama in November.
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"When you look at all the problems this country is facing with regard to energy, the environment, and a competitive work force, we can't allow science and technology to atrophy and still expect to solve them," says Doug Comer, a lobbyist for Intel who chairs the task force.
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http://sciencenow.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/full/2008/919/1?rss=1">Science NowLooks like the GOP wants to use the GOP-designed bank collapse and the GOP-controlled bank bailouts to further implement their "disaster capitalism" and erode opportunities for anyone who isn't a GOP donor.