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The Progressive Budget is the only budget that works because …

June 12, 2025 By Egberto Willies Leave a Comment

Ro Khanna recently unveiled the Progressive Budget. Here are some essential facts about why this type of budget is the most effective.

The Progressive Budget

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Summary

The Progressive Budget championed by Representative Ro Khanna flips austerity on its head: it shrinks the deficit by roughly $12 trillion while pouring resources into working-class communities, paid for by trimming Pentagon waste, ending fossil-fuel giveaways, negotiating fair drug prices, and finally taxing wealth like work.

  • Khanna’s plan modernizes the military and audits contractors, harvesting $850 billion in savings from a Pentagon that has never passed an audit.
  • By cracking down on rampant Medicare Advantage upcoding and fraud, the budget reclaims up to $15 billion annually that insurers siphon from taxpayers.
  • Restoring the corporate tax rate to 28 percent, closing carried-interest loopholes, and adding a 0.01 percent financial-transaction tax would raise trillions without touching working-class wallets.
  • Eliminating fossil-fuel subsidies and enforcing drug-price negotiation saves an additional $370 billion, redirecting public money from polluters to clean-energy and healthcare investments.
  • In stark contrast, the Trump-backed “Big Beautiful Bill” inflates the deficit by $2.4 trillion while skewing benefits to the top one percent and stripping health coverage from millions.

History proves that taxing concentrated wealth and investing in people—Clinton’s 1990s surpluses delivered 22 million jobs—beats trickle-down every time; Khanna’s Progressive Budget builds on that lesson and charts a fiscally sound, morally grounded path forward.


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The United States faces a manufactured fiscal dilemma: endless tax breaks for the wealthy starve public priorities, then deficit hawks demand cuts to the very programs that keep families afloat. Representative Ro Khanna’s Progressive Deficit Reduction Plan punctures that cycle by treating the budget not as a ledger to be balanced on the backs of workers but as a moral document that reflects national values. His proposal erases $12 trillion of red ink over a decade—five times the hole blown by the latest Trump-aligned “Big Beautiful Bill”—and does so without sacrificing a single school lunch or dialysis treatment.

Khanna begins where waste is most grotesque: the Pentagon. Year after year, defense contractors pocket nearly a trillion taxpayer dollars despite the Department of Defense’s failure to pass even one audit. By streamlining procurement, canceling redundant weapons systems, and replacing private profiteering with stricter in-house oversight, the plan frees $850 billion for deficit reduction and peace-time industries. Congressional watchdogs across party lines acknowledge that a leaner defense need not compromise security; it merely reins in boondoggles that enrich CEOs while veterans navigate overcrowded hospitals.

Next, the budget tackles the silent heist embedded in Medicare Advantage. Private insurers inflate risk scores—a practice known as upcoding—to secure larger reimbursements than their patients’ conditions warrant. Recent health economics research estimates that the scam drains $10–15 billion every year. Khanna’s plan reverses that flow by scrapping the incentive structure, mandating clawbacks, and empowering the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services to police abuse in real-time. Savings approach $170 billion over ten years—funds that can extend traditional Medicare’s solvency instead of padding shareholders’ dividends.

The plan recognizes, too, that where the government spends money matters as much as how much it spends. By eliminating $200 billion in fossil-fuel subsidies, the proposal redirects public capital toward clean energy research and resilient infrastructure. This shift aligns fiscal prudence with climate justice, creating union jobs in wind- and solar-panel manufacturing while easing the energy burden on low-income households.

On the revenue side, Khanna’s blueprint restores the corporate tax rate to 28 percent, a level still below the post-war average but high enough to keep multinationals from free-riding on public goods. Closing the carried-interest loophole ensures that hedge-fund managers pay the same marginal rate as the nurses whose retirement savings they invest. A 0.01 percent financial-transaction tax finally asks Wall Street’s high-frequency traders—whose algorithms skim pennies from each micro-second trade—to contribute to the society whose legal infrastructure makes their profits possible. Combined with a surtax on extreme wealth, these measures raise trillions without touching middle-class paychecks.

Critics cling to the trickle-down myth, insisting that taxing capital chokes growth. History begs to differ. During the Clinton presidency, the top marginal rate hovered near 39.6 percent. Yet, the economy added 22 million jobs while turning record deficits into surpluses. The key lies in the marginal propensity to consume: dollars in a working-class wallet circulate quickly, buying groceries, repairing roofs, and hiring local childcare—activities that multiply demand throughout the economy. Conversely, an extra million parked in a billionaire’s offshore account stimulates little besides speculative finance.

The contrast with Trump’s latest budget proposal could not be starker. The Republican bill renews and expands tax giveaways first enacted in 2017, balloons the deficit by $2.4 trillion, and strips Medicaid eligibility from millions under the guise of “personal responsibility.” It is, in effect, a reverse Robin Hood: robbing public coffers to enrich the same plutocrats whose fortunes soared during the pandemic on the backs of the working class.

Khanna’s Progressive Budget answers with a forward-looking solidarity. It demands that Amazon, Chevron, and BlackRock contribute a fair share to the roads on which their trucks and data centers rely. It severs the Gordian knot of corporate welfare and reinvests in community clinics, tuition-free college, and green manufacturing corridors. And crucially, it demonstrates that fiscal responsibility and social justice are not opposites but allies: balance the books by empowering workers, not by impoverishing them.

In a nation where union nurses face eviction even as defense CEOs collect eight-figure bonuses, the Progressive Budget feels radical only because the status quo has normalized injustice. The math is sound, the precedent straightforward, and the moral imperative urgent. Congress can either subsidize billionaires—or, as Khanna proposes, finance the future that everyday Americans already earn with their labor. The choice defines not just the next fiscal year but the republic’s democratic soul.

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Filed Under: General Tagged With: Progressive Budget, Ro Khanna

About Egberto Willies

Egberto Willies is a political activist, author, political blogger, radio show host, business owner, software developer, web designer, and mechanical engineer in Kingwood, TX. He is an ardent Liberal that believes tolerance is essential. His favorite phrase is “political involvement should be a requirement for citizenship”. Willies is currently a contributing editor to DailyKos, OpEdNews, and several other Progressive sites. He was a frequent contributor to HuffPost Live. He won the 2nd CNN iReport Spirit Award and was the Pundit of the Week.

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