By Erik Wasson

President Obama will release his 2013 budget one week late an administration official said Monday the third time the administration has missed the legal deadline.
Under the law the budget is to be released on the first Monday in February but the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) will be releasing the 2013 budget on Feb. 13.
The Obama administration also delayed the release of the budget last year waiting until Feb. 14.
House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan (R-Wis.) said the delay is symptomatic of a fiscally reckless administration.

I am deeply disappointed in this Presidents abdication of leadership when it comes to prioritizing Americans hard-earned tax dollars. The decision to delay the release of his budget again could not come at a more precarious moment for our fiscal and economic future Ryan said.
This will mark the third time in four years the President has missed his statutory requirement to present a budget on time while trillion-dollar budget deficits continue to mount. As the President announces another missed deadline tomorrow marks the 1000th day Senate Democrats have gone without any budget at all.
Sen. Jeff Session (R-Ala.) the ranking member on the Senate Budget Committee blasted the delay and said he was shocked to hear the administration would again fail to deliver a budget on time.
In this the final year of his term one would think he would be ready and eager to lay out his detailed plan for our nations financial future.
The release of the presidents budget is the first step in the spending cycle for the federal government. President Obama is expected to call for $1.2 trillion in automatic discretionary spending cuts which were triggered by the failure of the deficit supercommittee to be replaced with other mandatory program cuts and tax increases. The proposals will be grounded in September recommendations the president made to the supercommittee.
The president will propose an increase in federal civilian workers pay as part of the budget an administration official confirmed this month.
The 0.5 percent pay increase comes after two years during which civilian pay was frozen to save billions. The 2013 pay increase is far less than the current rate of inflation which stood at 3.4 percent in November compared to a year earlier.
The official said that in order to cuts costs the administration will not be releasing print copies of the huge four-volume budget to the news media for free.