The original
The chart we posted yesterday from the Center for American Progress (CAP) compared the final
Yes and no.
Loren Adler from the Center for a Responsible Federal Budget (CRFB) dug into the numbers and broke them out by defense and non-defense spending. That tells a different story. Take a look:
Total discretionary spending in the Murray-Ryan budget is below that of the original Ryan budget, but that is only because of defense spending. In Ryan's original budget, he called for $620 billion in defense spending. The final agreement has $90 billion less.
On the non-defense side, the original Ryan budget called for $429 billion in spending, but the final amount was $63 billion more than that.
Compared with the original Ryan Budget, defense spending is way down and non-defense up, leaving total discretionary spending a bit down overall. That's still not good but it isn't as bad as CAP's chart suggests.
(h/t Brad Plumer)