House Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio), still struggling badly to persuade the public that his fiscal rhetoric makes sense, held another Capitol Hill event this morning — except this one included charts and hashtags (thanks to my colleague Nazanin Rafsanjani for the tip).
The point of the Speaker’s remarks was to push a new message that Boehner seems excited about: “Spending is the problem.” It’s a phrase that Republicans seem to think solves their political troubles — why won’t the GOP compromise and accept higher tax rates on the wealthiest Americans? Because revenue isn’t the problem; spending is the problem.
The Speaker even had a Paul Ryan chart, and it’s not like Ryan has a reputation for making things up, right?
By focusing solely on one side of the ledger, Boehner hopes to push the debate onto more comfortable terrain. He doesn’t want a debate about reducing the debt and moving towards a balanced budget; he wants a debate about shrinking government. This isn’t about finding a post-election compromise with those who won with broad public support; this is about the Republican crusade to cut public investments and weaken public institutions for purely ideological ends.
If the Speaker and his caucus can persuade folks that “spending is the problem” — and there are no other problems — it will serve as a counterweight to Democratic goals of a “balanced,” bipartisan solution.
The flaw in Boehner’s pitch? Spending is not the problem.
For Republicans, it’s an incontrovertible fact that President Obama has thrown caution to wind and increased spending dramatically in his first term, writing checks like there is no tomorrow. In reality, government spending has gone down as a percentage of GDP, a fact that’s been documented many, many times. What’s more, Obama accepted $1 trillion in spending cuts just last year, and the White House is offering additional spending cuts as part the ongoing fiscal talks.
It’s true that spending is set to increase in the coming years, but that’s not because rascally Democrats are fiscally irresponsible; it’s because of an aging population and rising health care costs.
There are modest steps we can take now to deal with these long-term fiscal challenges, but to date, Republicans have opposed all of them.








