There’s no shortage of important issues competing for Americans’ attention, especially in the midst of an election season. Indeed, as early voting gets underway across much of the country, assorted candidates, parties, organizations and super PACs are working diligently to focus voters’ attention on various hopes and fears about the near future.
But there is a degree of irony to the circumstances: The one political fight that’s likely to matter most next year is the one thing most voters are hearing very little about.
With Republicans favored to take over the majority in the U.S. House, Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy is preparing to become the House speaker. And while the California congressman doesn’t have much of a governing blueprint in mind — the GOP remains a post-policy party — McCarthy told Punchbowl News about one step he’s prepared to take once he’s in a position of real power.
Let’s start with the most sensitive item House Republicans will have to deal with — the debt limit. The nation’s statutory borrowing cap will need to be lifted at some point in 2023, probably during the second half of the year. McCarthy signaled that Republicans would again hold the debt limit up for policy changes.
The article added that the Republicans’ debt ceiling crisis from 2011 was a “debacle,” but GOP lawmakers “apparently are ready to try again in order to force ‘structural changes’ to popular entitlement programs including Social Security and Medicare.”
“You can’t just continue down the path to keep spending and adding to the debt,” McCarthy told Punchbowl News, indifferent to the fact that he and his party only raise these concerns when there’s a Democrat in the White House, only to promptly forget about the issue during Republican administrations.
The report went on to note, “We asked McCarthy if he intended to try to reform entitlements as part of the debt ceiling debate. McCarthy said he wouldn’t ‘predetermine’ anything.”
I’m mindful of the fact that for many news consumers, the moment they see phrases such as “debt ceiling” and “debt limit,” they stop reading. The idea that this might very well be the single most important issue of 2023 probably seems absurd.
But I hope at least some voters won’t get too hung up on the phrasing and will instead appreciate the fact that Republican leaders — by their own admission — are prepared to provoke a global financial crisis, on purpose.
McCarthy isn’t the only one admitting this out loud and on the record. The top GOP lawmakers planning to take control of the House Budget Committee have also talked openly about holding the debt ceiling hostage in order to force regressive policy changes, including possible cuts to Social Security and Medicare.
The process might seem complex to those who don’t follow legislative affairs closely, so let’s make this plain. Here’s how the fight would play out:
Republicans: It’s time for Democrats to slash public investments and agree to cuts to popular social insurance programs that benefit millions of families.
Democrats: Nope.








