GOP Embraces Crisis Politics, Pushes For Three-Month Debt
Ceiling Increase
House Republicans are
apparently starting to get the message that not raising the nation’s debt limit
would cause an economic crisis, as they are reportedly considering a plan that
would raise the limit. But they would do so, according to a Bloomberg report, only until April 15, meaning the country will
face a similar situation in just two months. House Majority Leader Eric Cantor
(R-VA) confirmed the report later, saying, “Next week, we will authorize a
three month temporary debt limit increase to give the Senate and House time to
pass a budget.”
Such a plan runs counter to the claims Republican leaders have
made for the last two years. Speaker John Boehner (R) and other Republicans
have repeatedly blamed “uncertainty” for crushing job and economic growth. Here
are a few examples:
– BOEHNER: “There is no question that the private sector in
America right now sees all of this uncertainty coming out of Washington: new rules,
new regulations and no idea what the tax rates are going to be at the end of
next year,” he says. “I
was with a group of employers in my own district yesterday who are very
concerned about investing more in their business at a time of great uncertainty
and I think government needs to help bring some certainty.”
– REP. PAUL RYAN (R-WI): “We should not have a government that stands in the way,” Ryan said during a
campaign event in Virginia. “We should have policies that help small businesses
grow and create jobs.” [...] “What is the President doing?” Ryan poised to his audience. “More
regulations, more uncertainty, more borrowing, more spending, more taxing.”
– REP. ERIC CANTOR (R-VA): “Small businesses in particular, the
backbone of our economy, face a cloud of uncertainty.This uncertainty prevents these
entrepreneurs from taking a risk, from starting a business, and creating jobs.”
Setting up repeated debt ceiling fights isn’t ideal, given how
costly they can be for the fragile economy. Republican intransigence on the debt
ceiling in the summer of 2011 cost the nation an estimated $18.9 billion and at least a million jobs. It also created the
so-called “fiscal cliff,” which set up another showdown at the end of the year
that was ultimately pushed back three months to March.
Republican fears of uncertainty aren’t backed up by their actions.
In the two years they have controlled Congress, America has reached the brink
of a government shutdown, narrowly avoided default, and nearly gone over the
“fiscal cliff,” leading President Obama to exclaim in a press conference last
week that “we’ve got to stop lurching from crisis to crisis to crisis.” A
three-month debt ceiling fix, though, would only increase the odds of another
crisis this spring, when the prospect of a government shutdown and the fiscal
cliff’s automatic spending cuts are also back on the table.
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