The six-word headline in the Wall Street Journal gets it just right: “Republicans Split on Debt-Ceiling Approach.” That wasn’t the case in 2011, when literally zero GOP lawmakers publicly denounced their party’s hostage strategy, but it’s certainly true now.
We talked yesterday about Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska), who became the first Republican lawmaker to declare, out loud and on the record, that the debt-ceiling shouldn’t be held hostage for political leverage. The next question, of course, is whether she would stand alone.
The answer is, apparently not. Greg Sargent reported late yesterday:
Reality seems to be enjoying a sudden burst of momentum this afternoon, as more Republicans and conservatives are coming out and acknowledging the debt ceiling will have to be raised. The latest: GOP Senator Susan Collins.
Collins spokesman Kevin Kelley emails me: “Senator Collins recognizes that the debt ceiling is going to have to be raised because the U.S. cannot default on its obligations to pay for spending that has already occurred.”
And then there were two.









