In the house editorial, The Wall Street Journal editors wrote about the burgeoning tax revenues accruing to the Federal government over the first third of the present fiscal year, the reduction in spending in several government departments and agencies, and the burgeoning spending on welfare entitlement programs.
Then they added this risible claim:
…continuing boom in the giant retirement and healthcare entitlements that aren’t subject to Congressional appropriations.
The editors might want to review their junior high Civics class notes. Here’s our Constitution’s requirement for Federal spending:
Art I, Sect 9: No Money shall be drawn from the Treasury, but in Consequence of Appropriations made by Law
All spending is subject to Congressional appropriations, and that includes “retirement and healthcare entitlements.” There are no caveats in that Section’s clause, no “except for programs inconvenient to alter or eliminate.”
Cutting spending on entitlements may be politically difficult but that’s not what the editors claimed. If the editors can’t find their notes, they need to listen better to their junior high interns when those kids brief them in preparation for expounding on government spending.