It’s another big day for Barely Speaker Kevin McCarthy. He gets to go to the White House and meet the president. He’s not going to be turning in his assigned homework from President Joe Biden, however, because that would require work. It would also require the ability to actually do the work, which he’s thus far not demonstrated. So far he’s been all empty blustering.
The White House had a two-part assignment for him that he simply commit to the principle that “the United States will never default on its financial obligation” and that he commit to presenting a budget to “transparently lay out to the American people their fiscal and economic proposals in the normal budget process.” That’s pretty much the bare minimum you can ask from a congressional leader, but too much for McCarthy, who responded with ... empty bluster. “I’m not interested in political games,” he tweeted in response. “I’m coming to negotiate for the American people.”
Uh huh. Just look at all the stuff he and his team have done “for the American people” in the first month of having their tiny majority:
- They voted to help out super-rich American tax cheats by repealing funding for the IRS. That bill, by the way, would increase the federal deficit by around $114 billion over the next decade, which pokes a big old hole in their supposed rationale for taking the full faith and credit of the U.S. hostage.
- They reiterated that they think abortion is icky and thus all American people who can get pregnant have to be ruled by their personal convictions.
- They passed some stuff about the Strategic Petroleum Reserve that does nothing to lower energy costs for the American people. In fact, it could do the exact opposite by limiting the president’s power to increase the supply of petroleum and lower gas prices.
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As for a budget that would back up their hostage demands on the debt ceiling? Fat chance. Even The New York Times, which has been steadfastly committed to both-sidesing the GOP’s economic terrorism, is reporting that the GOP’s got nothing.
Republicans have insisted that they want “structural” fiscal changes in exchange for voting to raise the borrowing cap, but they have so far declined to offer a cohesive plan outlining what programs they would cut. Internal divisions over how to reduce spending have been spilling into public view, underscoring the political challenge that Republicans face as they try to wield the specter of a default to extract concessions from President Biden and Democrats.
But let’s talk about what they are threatening to do to the American people by inviting a default, by actually planning for a default.
Here’s Mark Zandi, chief economist of Moody’s Analytics:
A default would be a catastrophic blow to the already-fragile economy. Global financial markets and the economy would be upended. Even if it is quickly resolved, Americans likely would pay for this default for generations, as global investors would rightly believe that the federal government’s finances have been politicized and that a time may come when they would not be paid what they are owed when owed it. …
[I] if lawmakers do not reverse course and the impasse drags on for even a few weeks, the hit to the economy would be cataclysmic. Most immediately, the federal government would have to slash its spending. Say the debt limit was breached on October 1 and dragged on all month. The Treasury would have no choice but to cut government spending by an estimated $125 billion. And if there is no agreement in November, another close to $200 billion in spending would need to be cut. The hit to the economy as these government spending cuts cascade through the economy would be overwhelming.
Which would not be great for the American people. At all.
It would also be disastrous for Republicans in 2024, which is likely not being lost on the non-maniacs in the GOP. They’ll find backup in the White House, the Democratic Senate, and their Democratic colleagues in the House, if they can find their spines.
Sign and send the petition: NO HOSTAGE TAKING for the debt ceiling.
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