This is a rush transcript from "Hannity," February 25, 2013. This copy may not be in its final form and may be updated.
SEAN HANNITY, HOST: Tonight, four days are all that remain before the $85 billion in automatic spending cuts kick into effect. Now, did President Obama spent his weekend trying to figure out how to avoid the sequester? No, of course not.
Instead of leading, the Obama administration decided its time, would best be spent by highlighting how the sequester would impact each of the 50 states. But what the White House failed to mention and the media won't cover yet again is that President Obama and his left-wing cohorts, they are the reason that this country is in this mess to begin with.
And now, the White House is trying to vilify Republicans -- they're heartless, they're budget cutters, they favor firing teachers and first responders and oh, kids don't get immunizations, and Republicans are going to shut down schools and let criminals go.
Now, earlier today, the House GOP leadership responded, they tried to put some sanity in these numbers into perspective.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
REP. KEVIN MCCARTHY, R-CALIF., HOUSE MAJORITY WHIP: The president's only idea to solve a problem is to take more from the hard working taxpayers. Let's put the sequester into perspective. It's $85 billion. We have a spending problem in Washington, we borrow more than a trillion.
We roughly borrow $85 billion every 28 days. So what we're looking to do is cut less than what we borrow in one month. Not what we spend, but what we borrow. This is not time for a road show president. This is a time to look for someone who will lead and work with us because we're willing to work with them to solve America's problem.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
HANNITY: All right. Now, Congressman McCarthy is absolutely correct. There will be a slight economic impact, but it will not put this country in dire straits.
Now, let me explain. The total government spending for the 2013 fiscal year is projected to be $3.6 trillion, which means the sequester cuts would only be a reduction of 2.4 percent. Now, let's compare this to the national debt which now sits at an alarming, a staggering $16.6 trillion. And the sequester cuts are only one-half of one percent of that number.
Now, the administration, they refuse to look at the big picture or try to confront the real economic problems that are facing the country. Our kids, our grandkids, they're going to be paying the price for this for years to come.
And as of today, if Americans were asked to reach deeper into their pockets and help pay off the national debt, well, each of you watching this program and every American would owe almost $53,000.
Now, it's pretty despicable and frankly immoral to be is stealing from future generations, and what Americans need to realize as they listen to the president -- and he'll be whining all week about this as he tries to pin this mess on the Republicans -- it was under his watch that the annual federal budget has jumped 19 percent since he stepped foot inside the Oval Office.
And joining me now to talk about what lies ahead before the sequester deadline strikes midnight on Friday, Democratic New York Congressman Gregory Meeks. And also, Republican Congressman Jeb Hensarling, he is with Texas.
Congressman Meeks, do you care about children?
REP. GREGORY MEEKS, D-N.Y.: Oh, I love children.
HANNITY: You love children, I love children, I have two kids. I might even be a grandpa one day at the rate I'm going, many years down the line of course. We borrow as a country, Congressman, 46 cents of every dollar you guys are spending in Washington. Forty six cents of every dollar we spend we borrow, 16-and-a-half trillion dollars in debt. And don't you think that there's something immoral about stealing from those kids? Because they're going to be the ones paying that back, is that wrong? No, no, is that wrong?
MEEKS: Listen, listen, number one, when the Republicans were in control, that's when we had all of this debt we're getting --
HANNITY: No, no, no is that wrong today -- I'm looking at today, is that wrong to steal from our kids' piggy banks? I'm asking.
MEEKS: We're not stealing from our kids' piggy bank.
HANNITY: We're not?
MEEKS: What we're saying is -- what we're saying, we got into a couple of wars that we shouldn't have been in and we have to pay for those wars --
(TALKING OVER EACH OTHER)
HANNITY: Oh good grief. No, no, no.
MEEKS: And now -- and now we've got to pay for these wars.
HANNITY: Obama gives us six trillion in debt. You're not getting away with this Congressman.
MEEKS: And so, what we need to do -- Sean, what we need to do is to make sure that everybody in America pays -- has their fair share.
HANNITY: Yes. I can finish your sentence for you. That's right.
MEEKS: So, we need to -- I'm with the Democrat, do we need to cut some spending? Absolutely.
HANNITY: Yes.
MEEKS: But do we need to raise some revenue? Absolutely. That's fair. In -- there's a new poll, 76 percent of Americans, Democrats and Republicans, agree with that.
HANNITY: Yes. OK. Now, let me ask you, Congressman Hensarling, because this is important because Congressman Meeks wouldn't answer, is it immoral and wrong to steal this money from future generations? Your take? We have over a trillion dollars in debt every year.
REP. JEB HENSARLING, R-TEXAS: Listen, absolutely. I've got a nine- year-old son, my daughter is turning 11 on Thursday. And you've nailed it. This is not just an economic question, it's a moral question, it's a question of generational theft.
You know, Sean, at what point do you quit spending money you don't have. If we continue on this trajectory, the one that the president and Democrats have put us on, you know, our children are going to be competing for fewer jobs, with shrinking paychecks, you know, living in smaller, older homes and they're going to be confined to small timid dreams, we are on the verge of being the first generation in America's history to leave the next generation with less freedom, fewer opportunities and a lower standard of living, and that's frankly immoral.
HANNITY: Well, George Bush did give us $4 trillion in debt in eight years, Obama's six trillion in four years.
Now, the following Democrats, Steny Hoyer, Nancy Pelosi, Tom Harkin and even the president today, they say we don't have a spending problem, you guys in Washington. Let's go to the videotape and see if Congressman Meeks agrees with this.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIPS)
PRESIDENT BARACK OBAMA: Folks, who think spending really is our biggest problem should be more concerned than anybody about improving our infrastructure right now.