Threatening to shut down the government? Irresponsible. Threatening to crash the entire economy? Genius!
That’s the surprising argument many of the biggest Republican critics of the House GOP’s shutdown strategy have adopted.
And while many of them have been making that case for weeks, their split take is coming into greater focus as the October 17 deadline to raise the debt limit approaches, raising the question: who’s really a “moderate” when it comes to this fiscal mess?
Sen. Tom Coburn warned his party to steer clear of the CR fight last month since they’d have to “fold like hotcakes” once the shutdown’s consequences sunk in.
“You do not take a hostage you are not going to for sure shoot,” he said. “And we will not for sure shoot this hostage.”
The debt ceiling, though? Plug it full of lead.
“I would dispel the rumor that’s going around that you hear on every newscast that if we don’t raise the debt ceiling, we’ll default on our debt,” he told CBS. “We won’t.”
The Oklahoma senator’s claim flies in the face of mainstream economists, who are warning this week that even a brief lapse in Treasury payments would likely trigger a 2008-level financial crisis. Tony Fratto, a top Treasury official under President George W. Bush, has been telling Republicans for months that Coburn’s claim that “prioritizing” payments after October 17 will ward off default is a fantasy. Even Speaker John Boehner conceded on Sunday that breaching the debt ceiling would be a disaster and he’s the guy threatening to push the button. The idea of self-induced default is so grotesque that some House Republicans are uncomfortable even acknowledging the party plans to use the debt ceiling as leverage.
Coburn’s dueling approaches to the shutdown and the debt ceiling are hardly an anomaly within his caucus. Fellow Senator Richard Burr of North Carolina, called an anti-Obamacare shutdown “the dumbest idea I’ve ever heard,” but he’s been echoing Coburn’s debt limit denier claims himself this week.
The shutdown vs. debt ceiling divide also complicates the “moderate” label anti-shutdown Republicans have earned this month.
In some cases, it’s obvious the moderate reboot wouldn’t stick. Coburn has a 98% lifetime rating from the American Conservative Union and, despite an independent streak, is easily one of the most right-leaning members of the Senate. He first ran for Senate in 2004 pledging to stop the scourge of “rampant” lesbianism in the Oklahoma university system. No one is mistaking him for a moderate.
But even among some lawmakers with a more centrist reputation, the dream of using a debt ceiling confrontation to extract concessions from Democrats is alive and well.
Congressman Peter King, often tagged as a moderate leader this month for his fiery critique of the shutdown, has consistently made the argument that the CR fight was stupid because it distracted from a fight over default.
“Now we’re saying we should negotiate on the debt limit, which is what we should have been doing for the last month,” King said on Fox News Sunday. “That’s where the real negotiation is, not on this strategy that was doomed to failure.”









