The right’s new bluff to appease its radicals
For now, threats to breach the debt ceiling are just another crazy thing the GOP has to do to tame its wing-nuts
TOPICS: DEBT CEILING, CREDIT DEFAULT, BARACK OBAMA, JOHN BOEHNER, GOVERNMENT SHUTDOWN,REPUBLICANS, TEA PARTY, HASTERT RULE, BOEHNER RULE, POLITICS NEWS
There’s a peculiar strain of thought in conservative circles that shutting down the government absent the destruction of Obamacare is an insane idea that will destroy the GOP’s House majority, but applying the same ultimatum to the debt ceiling makes perfect sense.
Sad but true.
That Republicans are passing this idea along to conservative journalists, and conservative journalists are passing it along to their readers as if the strategy has even a scintilla of strategic merit or viability provides us a fascinating real-time look at a the inflation of a misinformation bubble.
But now liberals are becoming concerned that what’s happening transgresses the kind of pandering and placation that’s become a normal part of the relationship between GOP leadership and the party base. They’re watching the bubble inflate and worried that it will create such an unprecedented level of delusion on the right that we’ll breach the debt ceiling and destroy the economy.
The idea, articulated here by Jonathan Chait, is that every time party leaders promise rank and file members and conservative voters they’ll extract some major concession from Obama on thenext must-pass bill, John Boehner’s small stock of credibility dwindles a just little bit more. This might be the time it finally runs out and they force him to make good on their demands. And that would mean moving the fight over Obamacare on to the most dangerous possible ground.
This is, I admit, a poor way to run a legislature. Nothing screams confidence to the public and markets like a political leader who treats his members the same way a gambler treats his loan shark. “C’mon, spot me again, I swear I’ll pay up next time!”
But I also think panicking now requires ignoring the way legislative history has unfolded for the past year.
I’m not simplistically arguing that because Congress has managed to avoid full blown crises for the past two and a half years, we should assume they’ll never allow one. If each heated confrontation carries a non-zero chance that we’ll reach a flashpoint, then eventually we will. But I do think, for now, that Boehner has a fail-safe. And if he didn’t we’d know about it.
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