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Senate Passes $22.9 Billion Spending Plan

North Carolina state government gets most of its revenue from individual taxpayers
Gov. Roy Cooper's office
North Carolina state government gets most of its revenue from individual taxpayers
North Carolina state government gets most of its revenue from individual taxpayers
Gov. Roy Cooper's office
North Carolina state government gets most of its revenue from individual taxpayers

The Republican-led North Carolina Senate passed its budget proposal along party lines early Friday morning.

The $22.9 billion dollar plan would spend more than $500 million less than a plan offered by Democratic Governor Roy Cooper.

Senate Democrats debated the budget bill for more than two hours, arguing it would favor wealthy people with tax cuts. But Republicans like Senator Harry Brown touted the plan's fiscal restraint.On this episode of the WUNCPolitics Podcast, a conversation about the Senate budget with Loretta Boniti of Spectrum News.

"I think we have tried to grow a rainy day fund to protect us for that next recession so we won't have to deal with that again. I think that's the right approach,” Brown said.

He added the spending bill helps the little guy. "Trying to give our small businesses, those that employ five or 10 people, an opportunity to hire a few more people to keep stimulating this economy is a smart thing,” he said.

Passage of the senate proposal is just the first step in the lengthy budgeting process. The House will release its own plan--then the two chambers will negotiate a final two-year spending package.

Copyright 2017 North Carolina Public Radio

Rusty Jacobs is a politics reporter for WUNC. Rusty previously worked at WUNC as a reporter and substitute host from 2001 until 2007 and now returns after a nine-year absence during which he went to law school at Carolina and then worked as an Assistant District Attorney in Wake County.
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