WASHINGTON -- Before releasing his budget publicly, Rep. Paul Ryan (R-Wis.) gave Senate Republicans a private briefing about the plan in early April. During that meeting, Sen. Rand Paul, a Tea Party-backed freshman from Kentucky, challenged Ryan in front of the rest of their party, according to two GOP aides briefed on the meeting. Sen. Paul said Rep. Ryan's plan did not do enough to cut spending and relied on too much deficit spending for too long, according to the aides.
Ryan gave it right back to him. The budget committee chairman went directly after Sen. Pauls five-year budget plan, which he had clearly studied closely. Ryans criticism went roughly like this: yes, he said, you slash the Department of Education and make fast, dramatic cuts, but you dont deal with entitlement spending. In the out years the deficit would sky-rocket, he said, making an air chart with his hand moving through the air and pointing sharply upward.
A GOP aide sympathetic to Sen. Paul said that Rep. Ryans criticism unfairly isolated a single part of his plan and treated as if it represented Pauls global approach to deficit reduction. Paul does plan to announce a proposal for cutting entitlement spending, the aide said, but wanted to put the domestic spending plan out first.
The private challenge from Sen. Paul reflects criticisms of Rep. Ryans plan Paul also made to HuffPost. Paul thinks that Ryans approach doesnt go nearly far enough.
Heres how bad it is: The presidents proposal, his ten year plan, is 46 trillion in spending. Paul Ryans alternative, which everybody is going crazy over, is still 40 trillion dollars in spending, Paul told HuffPost. My problem with the whole thing is that all of the proposals basically increase spending.
Rand Paul said that Paul Ryans plan relies too heavily on deficit spending. The president adds, I think, 11 trillion to the gross debt and Ryans plan adds eight trillion. I dont think anybody up here realizes that we cant withstand trillion dollar annual deficits, he said.