WASHINGTON – The Senate Budget Committee announced Tuesday that it has delayed action on its annual fiscal blueprint, as Republicans disagree among themselves on spending levels and trillions of dollars in longer-term budget cuts.

Budget Committee Chairman Mike Enzi, R-Wyo., announced the election-year delay, which comes as the House is gridlocked on its own plan. Several dozen House conservatives are opposing a draft companion measure because it endorses spending increases for domestic agencies that were part of last year’s bipartisan budget and debt pact.

The combined developments are an embarrassment for Republicans, who were quick to criticize Democrats for failing to produce budget plans when they controlled the House and Senate.

Enzi said he’ll keep working toward a plan, but noted that the annual spending bills can go forward under last year’s budget deal.

“The Senate Budget Committee will continue to discuss the budget as well as improvements to the budget process that would increase fiscal honesty, stability in government operations and the ability to help govern our nation,” Enzi said.

The budget panel is stocked with Republicans facing difficult re-election races, including Kelly Ayotte, R-N.H., Rob Portman, R-Ohio, and Ron Johnson, R-Wis. This year’s worsening fiscal picture means that meeting the Republican goal of balancing the budget would require even deeper spending cuts than the $5 trillion-plus over 10 years proposed in last year’s budget.

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The annual congressional budget resolution is a nonbinding blueprint that sets goals for follow-up legislation. While it sets broad parameters, it doesn’t actually increase spending or impose cuts by itself. Still, votes on or in relation to the budget can provide fodder for political ads.

The budget instead sets an overall limit for the annual appropriations bills, and, in some years, is used to set in motion special tax or budget legislation that can’t be filibustered in the Senate. That was the means by which Republicans delivered legislation seeking to gut President Barack Obama’s signature health care law to his desk earlier this year. Obama promptly vetoed it.

Senate Democratic leaders weighed in Monday as well in a letter to Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., promising to help in moving the annual appropriations bills through the chamber. They said top Republicans should make sure key domestic programs are adequately funded and that the measures should be kept clean of poison pills such as Republican policy “riders.”

“This is a win-win opportunity, and we should seize it together,” said the letter from Democrats, including Sen. Barbara Mikulski of Maryland and Minority Leader Harry Reid of Nevada.

In the House, Budget Committee Chairman Tom Price, R-Ga., has fashioned a budget plan but has yet to publicly release it. Last week, in a bid to build conservative support, Price floated a proposal to pass the budget in conjunction with a package of spending cuts that would total at least $30 billion over two years. It’s not clear how much support there is for the idea.


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