About a month ago, Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen testified to Congress that lawmakers must raise the debt ceiling to avoid “catastrophic consequences.” The cabinet secretary, who also served as the chair of the Federal Reserve, added, “I would plead with Congress simply to protect the full faith and credit of the United States” by addressing the issue before lawmakers’ summer break.
Republicans heard Yellen’s appeal, but they’re choosing to ignore her. Punchbowl News reported this morning:
Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell is taking a very hard line on the debt ceiling. His message — if Senate Democrats want to raise the debt ceiling, they’re going to have to do it themselves because no Republicans will vote for it in the current “environment” on Capitol Hill. “I can’t imagine there will be a single Republican voting to raise the debt ceiling after what we’ve been experiencing,” McConnell told [Punchbowl News’ John Bresnahan] on Tuesday night in the Capitol.
A few hours earlier, Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) said he intends to present the Democratic majority next week with the GOP’s demands. In effect, the South Carolinian is preparing a ransom note: if the governing party wants to prevent a global financial crisis, it’ll have to pay Republican hostage-takers.
Circling back to our earlier coverage, none of this is coming out of nowhere. Indeed, one of the first signs of trouble came back in March.
Politico reported that congressional Republicans, outraged that Democrats had the audacity to pass a COVID relief package that the GOP didn’t like, were “plotting” their “payback.” To punish Dems for governing without them, “several” GOP senators were “lining up against raising the debt ceiling.”
NBC News reported a month later that National Republican Senatorial Committee Chair Rick Scott (R-Fla.) was leading the push. The same day, the Washington Post moved the ball forward, noting that Senate Republicans held a private discussion on the party’s strategy for the coming months, and signaled a willingness to “oppose any future increase to the debt ceiling unless Congress also couples it with comparable federal spending cuts.”
I’m mindful of the fact that many normal people probably forget the key elements of this issue, so let’s revisit our Q&A.
Wait, do we really have to talk about the debt ceiling again?
I’m afraid so. No one wants to have this conversation — now or ever — but Senate Republicans are picking the fight, so it’s important for the public to understand what’s at stake.
Fine. It’s been a decade since I last thought about this, so you might as well refresh my memory and tell me what the heck the debt ceiling is.
In our system of government, Congress has the “power of the purse” and appropriates federal funds, but it’s the executive branch that actually spends the money. For the most part, this works relatively smoothly, though there’s an important sticking point: the executive branch lacks the legal authority to spend more than the country takes in.
Since the United States nearly always runs an annual budget deficit, this means administrations have spent decades going back to Congress and asking lawmakers to extend the nation’s borrowing limit — in effect, getting permission to spend all of the money lawmakers already allocated.
This model seems badly flawed.
It is. In fact, no major economy on the planet operates this way.
What happens if the United States fails to extend its borrowing authority?
Nothing good. Failure would result in the world’s largest economy defaulting on its debts and obligations, which would likely spark a global crisis. It’s precisely why Secretary Yellen warned lawmakers of “catastrophic consequences.”
But for most of modern history, this hasn’t made much of a difference, right?
Right. Lawmakers in both parties have occasionally used the process of raising the debt ceiling for grandstanding, but neither party had ever seriously entertained the possibility of trashing the full faith and credit of the United States government.
And then?
And then Republicans won control of the U.S. House in the 2010 midterms, and got to work launching a first-of-its-kind debt-ceiling crisis in 2011. GOP lawmakers told the Obama White House that they would refuse to extend the nation’s borrowing limit — which is to say, refuse to cover the debts the nation had already accrued — until Democrats met the Republican Party’s non-negotiable demands.
You make it sound as if GOP elected officials held the nation hostage.
Because they did. In fact, Mitch McConnell himself described his party’s tactics as a “hostage” strategy at the time. Soon after, then-Vice President Joe Biden reportedly told congressional Democrats, in reference to GOP lawmakers, “They have acted like terrorists.”
What was it, exactly, that Republicans included in their hostage ransom note?
Then-House Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio) came up with what he called the “Boehner Rule”: Any debt-ceiling increase would have to be tied to a dollar-for-dollar spending-cut agreement. In other words, if Congress had to raise the limit by $1 trillion, then the Democratic administration would have to agree to $1 trillion in spending cuts. A $2 trillion increase to the debt ceiling would require $2 trillion in cuts. And so on.
That sounds familiar.
It should. Though the Boehner Rule eventually disappeared — it was a mindless post-policy gimmick, which was based on total gibberish — it’s the same idea many congressional Republicans are pushing now.








