Last week, a motion to proceed on a budget resolution introduced by Sen. Rand Paul (R-KY) was decisively defeated in the Senate (7 in favor, 90 opposed).ย Paulโ€™s proposal would have balanced the budget in five years (fiscal year 2016) through spending cuts and no tax increases. Social Security and Medicare would not have been altered. Instead, the proposal merely instructed relevant congressional committees to enact reforms that would achieve โ€œsolvencyโ€ over a 75-year window.

Thatโ€™s hardly radical.

Paulโ€™s proposed spending cuts were certainly bold by Washingtonโ€™s standards, but they werenโ€™t radical either. For example, military spending would have been cut, in part, by reducing the governmentโ€™s bootprint abroad. From the Paul proposal:

The ability to utilize our immense air and sea power, to be anywhere in the world in a relatively short amount of time, no longer justifies our expanded presence in the world. This budget would require the Department of Defense to begin realigning the over 750 confirmed military installations around the world. It would also require the countries that we assist to begin providing more funding to their own defense. European, Asian, and Middle Eastern countries have little incentive to increase their own military budgets, or take control of regional security, when the U.S. has consistently subsidized their protection.

Over 750 confirmed military installations around the world. Thatโ€™s enough to make a Roman emperor blush. Isnโ€™t continuing to go deeper into debt to subsidize theย defense of rich alliesthe more โ€œradicalโ€ position? (See these Cato essays for more on downsizing theย Department of Defense.)

Other cuts included eliminating theย Department of Housing & Urban Development, theDepartment of Energy, and most of theย Department of Education. Butย unlike most Republicans, Paul didnโ€™t apologize for the cuts or use the debt dilemma as a cop out. Instead, he explains in his plan why these federal activities are counterproductive and should be devolved to the states or left to the private sector.

Itโ€™s disappointing that Paul could only get seven Republicans and no Democrats to support his budget. For all the bluster about needing to cut spending, not raise taxes, and stop the Obama administrationโ€™s big government agenda, most Republican senators said โ€œno diceโ€ when given the chance to vote in favor of a plan that would accomplish all three objectives and balance the budget inย five years.

cross-posted from Cato-at-Liberty