Cutting billions from entitlements is unlikely to be hammered out in the few days before Christmas, leaving lawmakers with another, familiar option: Sequester II, a second fiscal cliff.
While a deal on tax rates—or at least extending a tax cut for middle-class families—seems near, there isn’t enough time before the Dec. 31st deadline to rework the entitlements program. Entitlement reform is a major sticking point for Republicans, who say they’ll allow tax hikes if those funds are spent more wisely.
“In terms of entitlements, this is going to be a two-step deal, we’re going to have to have some sort of down-payment that gets us past the cliff, where we agree on the broader outlines in terms of what this program will look like,” Morning Joe economic analyst Steve Rattner explained on Thursday’s show. “Then we’re going to be working well into next year in order to do the entitlements work, to do the tax work. One thing that hasn’t been figured out is the enforcement mechanism.”
Meet the Press’ David Gregory added that a second sequester, or batch of automatic cuts, is the most likely enforcement mechanism.









