Sen. Rand Paul blasts GOP colleagues, says they should 'apologize' to Obama for past spending complaints

'We can't keep borrowing another trillion dollars every couple of months'

Congressional Republicans should apologize to former President Barack Obama "for complaining that he was spending and borrowing too much," Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., told "Your World" Wednesday.

"It's funny that people say, 'Well, Washington Republicans and Democrats never compromise and can't get along.' That's actually the opposite of the truth," Paul told host Neil Cavuto. "Republicans and Democrats compromise every day of the year to spend money we don't have.

"So we were already running a trillion dollars short just with our normal budgetary expenses for the year," the senator went on. "We added three trillion [with the CARES Act]. Now they're talking about another one to two trillion. We're going to borrow $5 trillion in five months. I remember when conservatives complained about George W. Bush borrowing $5 trillion in eight years ... [Obama] was a piker compared to their borrowing that they're doing now."

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Paul warned that the amount of spending involved in such legislation could have negative consequences for Republicans in November.

"The politicians around here say, 'Oh, no, we just have to buy more voters by flooding the economy with money.' Well, guess what?" he asked. "What if conservatives or libertarians that vote Republican decide, 'The hell with it, you're acting like Democrats, we're either staying home or voting for a third party.' You know what? They might just lose this election because they're acting like Democrats now."

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Turning to the issue of unemployment benefits, Paul told Cavuto his GOP colleagues were "once again making President Obama look conservative."

"When you increase the benefits and you pay people, [and] the government pays them more for not working than they were getting for working, you institutionalize unemployment," Paul said. "Even President Obama didn't do that."

Paul concluded by telling Cavuto the only way to pull the economy out of what he called a "government-mandated depression" is to "get rid of the government mandates and let the economy function as it did normally. We had a great economy until the government mandated this depression."

"You can't keep doing this," he warned. "We can't keep borrowing another trillion dollars every couple of months."

Fox News' Megan Henney contributed to this report.

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