I simply lack the adjectives to describe how ridiculous this is.
A government shutdown is looming on Oct. 1. But don’t worry about it.
That’s the message the House Republican leadership and its allies are spreading as Congress moves toward a fiscal showdown with President Barack Obama and the Democrats, a clash with huge political and economic ramifications for both parties.
Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio), Majority Leader Eric Cantor (R-Va.), Majority Whip Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) and their allies are instead privately urging rank and file to forgo a clash over government funding — and a possible government shutdown — and instead dig in against Obama and the Democratic Senate when the debt ceiling needs to be lifted sometime next month.
We talked on Friday about the various options available to the House Republican leadership when it comes to avoiding a government shutdown at the end of the month, and I sketched out what I see as the four most likely scenarios. It appears Boehner and his team are going with the single most reckless and dangerous approach possible.
The deadline for a debt-ceiling increase may come as quickly as five weeks from now. Boehner and GOP leaders know they’ll have to raise the limit; they know the consequences of failure are likely to be catastrophic; and they know that they did real harm to the country when they deliberately created the first-ever debt ceiling crisis in American history two years ago.
And yet, they’re willing — in fact, Republicans are eager — to put Americans through this nightmare again. They want to trade one hostage (“give us what we want or we’ll shut down the government”) for another (“give us what we want or we’ll trash the full faith and credit of the United States, push the nation into default, and likely crash the economy on purpose”).
I continue to find this item from Ezra Klein compelling: “Trading a government shutdown for a debt-ceiling breach is like trading the flu for septic shock. And Boehner knows it. Republicans will effectively be going to the White House and saying, ‘Delay the health-care law or we will single-handedly cause an unprecedented and unnecessary global financial crisis that everyone will clearly and correctly blame on us, destroying our party for years to come.’ … This is not a safe way to govern the country.”
The White House’s National Economic Council reminded reporters yesterday that even having a debate about the debt ceiling does real harm to the nation.
So perhaps someone can explain to me why the Republican Party’s willingness to threaten Americans with deliberate harm isn’t a serious national scandal.
At a certain level, I’m probably understating matters. Consider this tidbit from late last week.
And in private discussions, GOP leadership aides acknowledge they have absolutely no idea how they’ll lift the $16.7 trillion debt ceiling.
Got that? In five weeks, House Republicans will have to raise the debt ceiling, but they haven’t the foggiest idea as to how to get that done.









