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Cal Thomas: Newt Gingrich’s plan

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WORLD Radio - Cal Thomas: Newt Gingrich’s plan

The former House speaker lays out a roadmap for achieving a balanced budget


Former House speaker Newt Gingrich in 2014 Associated Press / Photo by Cliff Owen

Editor's note: The following text is a transcript of a podcast story. To listen to the story, click on the arrow beneath the headline above.

MYRNA BROWN, HOST: Today is Thursday, October 2nd. Good morning! This is The World and Everything in It from listener-supported WORLD Radio. I’m Myrna Brown.

MARY REICHARD, HOST: And I’m Mary Reichard. Up next, what it’ll take for the government to stop spending beyond its limit. Here’s WORLD commentator Cal Thomas.

CLINTON: We come here today Democrats and Republicans, Congress and President, Americans of goodwill from all points of view and all walks of life to celebrate a true milestone for our nation in a few moments I will sign into law the first balanced budget in a generation….

CAL THOMAS: On August 5th, 1997, President Bill Clinton and the Republican-controlled Congress, led by Speaker Newt Gingrich, enacted the Balanced Budget Act. This bipartisan agreement aimed to balance the federal budget by 2002. Most of the credit goes to Gingrich because Clinton had vetoed previous Republican proposals for reducing the debt. The deal resulted in four consecutive years of budget surpluses, a rarity. But the big spending addicts returned and so has the debt, now more than $37 trillion dollars.

We are once again in another so-called “government shut-down.” Democrats are hoping the current one will be blamed on Republicans…as in the past. Perhaps it’s time to bring back Clinton and Gingrich to work their previous magic. As with President Trump’s DOGE, Gingrich exposed large amounts of wasteful and unnecessary spending.

In an email, Gingrich tells me he visited Capitol Hill last month and gave budget committee staff of the House and Senate a “workbook” detailing how to balance the budget and pay down the national debt.

Gingrich says public support is crucial. He Gingrich believes voters must be convinced debt reduction is a necessity. He references a 2014 Gallup poll which found respondents believed the government wastes 51 cents of every dollar it spends. A 2025 YouGov-Cato found that number had increased to 59 cents per dollar. America’s New Majority Project reported last month that 69 percent of voters support a constitutional amendment requiring Congress to balance the budget.

Gingrich writes this: “A major part of any serious balanced budget-debt repayment program, must include hearings and reports highlighting waste, fraud, inefficiency, and ineffectiveness. The theme must be that a modernized, effective government would deliver better results for the American people at a much lower cost. This theme is especially important in health and health care, which must be improved dramatically if the budget is ever to be balanced. Health care is 18% of the GDP and the largest expense of the federal government. It costs $1.7 trillion—nearly twice what we spend for defense. More than 27% of all federal spending is focused on health care.”

He adds that messaging is key, and many variations should be tried until the right one is found. Among them might be Ronald Reagan’s line: “We don't have deficits because people are taxed too little. We have deficits because big government spends too much.“ Gingrich says “Government spending went up 58% from 2019 to 2025 while the population only went up 3%.”

The former Speaker proposes three steps: “First, there must be a concerted communications effort to, in (Margaret) Thatcher’s language, ‘win the argument and then win the vote.’ One possible future means economic decay, fiscal bankruptcy and massive tax transfers from working Americans to foreign bond holders. The effect of that decaying future on the economy, American society and our national security must be driven deeply into the collective mindset. It is simply irresponsible and destructive to allow the current wasteful, self-indulgent and selfish system to continue.

Second, there must be a broad coalition that sustains this vision for years. The American system, and especially the American news media, has a powerful commitment to having the urgent drive out the important. Elected officials alone do not have the time or communications weight to sustain such a big strategic goal over time. Many people and institutions must be committed to saving America by re-establishing fiscal stability. They must return to this commitment daily, without regard to headlines that seek to distract from the vital long-term goal.

“Third, elected officials, congressional staff and the Executive Branch must commit to be the team that saves America from bankruptcy and economic collapse. If one-third of the Republicans in Congress and the Executive are seriously, constantly focused on balancing the budget and paying off debt, their party and institutions will follow. They must be prideful and militant about doing something historic. The dramatically better future will be worth the time, conflict and frustrations.

There’s much more in the Gingrich “workbook.” Reducing debt and balancing the budget can again be achieved. All that is necessary is the will.

I’m Cal Thomas. 


WORLD Radio transcripts are created on a rush deadline. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Accuracy and availability may vary. The authoritative record of WORLD Radio programming is the audio record.

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