By Travis Waldron on Mar 21, 2012 at
9:35 am
When
House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan (R-WI) released his Medicare-ending,
safety net-gutting 2012 budget plan last year, he was slammed by faith leaders who denounced
his cuts to programs that aid the poor and middle class. Ryan released the 2013
version of that budget yesterday, and he is again facing criticism from a
diverse group of faith leaders.
Ryan
often says it is “morally wrong” not to address America’s debt, but faith
leaders like Bishop Gene Robinson said the budget Ryan crafted fails basic
moral tests. “The Ryan budget robs the poor, the marginalized and the
vulnerable of the safety net so integral to their survival,” Robinson said. “By
any measure of civility and regard for one’s neighbor, it is an immoral disaster.”
Father
Thomas Kelly, a Catholic priest and constituent of Ryan’s, felt similarly:
“As
a constituent of Congressman Ryan and a Catholic priest, I’m disappointed by
his cruel budget plan and outraged that he defends it on moral grounds.
Ryan is Catholic, and he knows that justice for the poor and economic fairness
are core elements of our church’s social teaching. It’s shameful that he
disregarded these principles in his budget.”
That
the GOP cuts vital programs like Medicare,
Medicaid, and other safety net programs while giving tax breaks to the richest Americans is
“immoral” and “unconscionable,” other leaders said. “The poor are not
statistics,” Rabbi Jackie Moline said. “Whatever one thinks of Congressman
Ryan’s ideas, it is unimaginable to look into the face of a child who would go
hungry without government assistance and say, ‘Sorry — we need to reduce the
deficit.’”
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