SMRs and AMRs

Thursday, June 16, 2011

Republicans Don’t Care If Default Boosts Deficits, Because They Don’t Care About Deficits

By Michael Grunwald
TIME
Wednesday, June 15, 2011

The Republican Party, after converting huge surpluses into huge deficits during the Bush era, after opposing deficit-reducing health reforms, student loan reforms and big-bank taxes during the Obama era, after continuing to clamor for trillions of dollars in deficit-expanding tax cuts while gutting House pay-as-you-go rules to make it easier to expand the deficit, has somehow managed to re-brand itself as the party of fiscal responsibility. It’s a remarkable political achievement.

It’s also useful context to discuss the increasingly urgent warnings by watchdogs like Congressional Budget Office director Doug Elmendorf and Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke that a U.S. debt default would have catastrophic fiscal as well as economic consequences. It would increase our borrowing costs. It would decrease our revenues. How to put this diplomatically? Uh…THE GOP DOESN’T CARE! As long as it doesn’t get blamed for those consequences.

It’s an outrageous situation, and I’ve certainly banged my spoon on my high chair about it. But it’s the situation we’re in. And Republicans are behaving perfectly rationally; they haven’t paid a political price for hypocrisy or irresponsibility in the past, so why shouldn’t they threaten to force a default unless President Obama adopts their agenda? Why shouldn’t they hold the full faith and credit of the U.S. government hostage, if voters will blame Obama for the results? Why shouldn’t they give pious speeches about the tragedy of the debt they created themselves?

The last time I argued with David Von Drehle about this stuff, he ended up (as usual) conceding I was right and claiming he had secretly agreed with me all along. But while I don’t plan of making a habit of saying things like this, his final point made a lot of sense: Republicans have been able to make political hay out of the deficit despite the fiscally profligate Bush era—and, David forgot to mention, despite continuing their fiscally profligate ways—because Obama has failed to make his political case.

Read more: http://swampland.time.com/2011/06/15/republicans-dont-care-if-default-boosts-deficits-because-they-dont-care-about-deficits/

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