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David Abbott's avatar

Deep in their hearts, Republicans know that if voters are ever forced to chose between progressive tax increases or cutting old age entitlements, they will soak the rich. Insofar as Republicans have a rational position, they are flailing around to obfuscate that choice to neutralize a losing issue.

This is basically a search for silver bullets. Cuts to old age entitlements can never be hidden. Any Congressional majority that meaningfully cuts social security or medicare will be decimated in the next election.

In the short run, making this a fight over debt rather than spending makes sense, because spending is popular and debt sounds icky. In the long term, Republicans can’t possibly get what they want. The smart ones know this and have left the cult of low taxes.

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Matt Hagy's avatar

Given how poorly McCarthy’s speaker election went, I cannot see how he rallies House Republicans around any spending cutting plan. He’s always going to be facing several attention-seeking maniacs who will vote against any potential bill while screeching to their supporters about how McCarthy is a sellout RINO who is compromising with Biden. In the unlikely event that these extremists actually propose cuts, they’ll certainly be too politically unpopular to garner support from moderate Republicans.

So I imagine we’ll keep walking to the abyss of a financial crisis, and eventually moderate Republicans will feel compelled to work with the Democrats to avoid the financial armageddon of a US Treasury default. McCarthy will either get on board with this bipartisan coalition or he’ll be replaced. Even the WSJ is considering this to be a likely scenario given the lack of any plan of what House Republicans actually want. [1]

> All of which means Republicans will have to pick their spending targets carefully, explain their goals in reasonable terms so they don’t look like they want a default, and then sell this to the public as a united team. The worst result would be for Republicans to talk tough for months, only to splinter in a rout at the end, and be forced to turn the House floor over to Democrats to raise the debt limit with nothing to show for it. Opportunists on the right would then cry “sellout,” even if they had insisted on demands that were unachievable.

> This is what Democrats expect to happen, which is why they don’t think they need to negotiate. If Republicans want to use the debt limit as leverage, they need a strategy for how this showdown ends, not merely how it begins.

[1] https://www.wsj.com/articles/the-hard-reality-of-a-debt-ceiling-showdown-house-republicans-congress-gop-11673904239

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