Advertisement

Dannemeyer’s Quest for Budget Seat Pays Off

Share
TIMES STAFF WRITER

Rep. William E. Dannemeyer, the combative Orange County conservative who is a strident critic of congressional spending and an unabashed booster of the gold standard, won a 10-year fight Friday for a coveted seat on the House Budget Committee.

The decision by House Republicans to put Dannemeyer on the 35-member panel, which plays a key role in setting overall spending limits for the government, is a major victory for the Fullerton Republican, who has sought the position since shortly after he was first elected to Congress in 1978.

“I am elated,” said the 61-year-old lawmaker. “It’s been a long struggle. . . . I think (the appointment) gives my work in this area more credibility.”

Advertisement

Dannemeyer has long been a thorn in the side of House Democrats--and more than a few Republicans--by voting against major bills that call for spending increases that exceed the rate of inflation. While his stand has earned him the enmity of colleagues who describe it as hopelessly unrealistic, it has garnered a host of awards from taxpayer-watchdog groups.

In an interview, Dannemeyer defended his votes. “If a majority of members of Congress had my voting record on spending issues, we’d have a balanced budget today,” he said. “Wouldn’t that be a pity?”

Dannemeyer also has suggested that the United States return to the gold standard, backing its currency with bullion to reduce interest costs and restore integrity to federal borrowing. At the very least, Dannemeyer said, the government should issue gold-backed bonds to cut the $250-billion annual cost of interest on the national debt. While some ridicule the suggestion, several conservative economists have embraced the concept of gold-backed bonds.

The move to put Dannemeyer on the Budget Committee was largely the result of efforts by Rep. Ron Packard (R-Carlsbad), who represents California on the Republican Committee on Committees, the panel that makes GOP committee assignments.

Packard won his seat on that panel last month, ousting Rep. Jerry Lewis (R-Redlands) with the strong backing of Dannemeyer and other California conservatives. Packard’s district includes southern Orange County.

Other California Republicans who won key House committee assignments Friday were incoming Reps. Randy (Duke) Cunningham (R-San Diego), a Navy veteran who was assigned to the Armed Services Committee, and Frank Riggs (R-Windsor), who won a spot on the Public Works and Transportation Committee.

Advertisement

“Overall, we were extremely successful in placing our California members on the committees they desired,” Packard said in a statement released by his office. “I am particularly happy that Mr. Dannemeyer made the Budget Committee after 10 years of trying. He probably knows more about the budget process than any other member of the House.”

The federal budget, along with the crisis in the Persian Gulf, is shaping up as one of the most divisive issues of the 102nd Congress, which convened Thursday. On the first day of the new session, Democrats, who control the House 267-167, rammed through a budget rule that immediately set off a Republican firestorm.

The complex rule essentially gives an arm of the Congress, and not the White House, authority to set budget estimates for major new social legislation. Republicans charged that in passing the rule, Democrats broke a pledge made during last fall’s acrimonious negotiations over a five-year, $500-billion deficit reduction package.

Referring to Dannemeyer’s appointment to the Budget Committee the day after the rules fight, one Republican staff member said: “OK, the Democrats got away with all the shenanigans on the rules yesterday. Well, today we said, ‘Merry Christmas!’ ”

A Democratic staffer who works on budget issues literally was speechless when informed of Dannemeyer’s appointment.

Dannemeyer also serves on the Energy and Commerce and the Judiciary committees. One aide suggested that he may have to take a leave from his post on the Judiciary Committee in order to serve on the budget panel. However, another staff member said Republicans are prepared to grant Dannemeyer a waiver to serve on all three committees, even though Dannemeyer has opposed such waivers in the past.

Advertisement
Advertisement