When Sen. Bob Corker, a prominent Republican lawmaker, said yesterday that he’s prepared to throw in the towel in the fight over taxes, it was widely seen as a step away from the current GOP strategy. A closer look, however, reveals a far more troubling gambit.
Just hours before the White House meeting, Senator Bob Corker, Republican of Tennessee, said on “Fox News Sunday” that a small but growing group of Republicans had begun considering acquiescing on tax rates so that the negotiations could shift to entitlement programs.
Mr. Corker, a member of the Banking Committee who had presented a deficit-reduction plan of his own, said that if Republicans gave in to the president’s chief demand, then “all of a sudden the shift goes back to entitlements, and maybe it puts us in a place where we actually can do something that really saves the nation.”
Putting aside the dubious notion that the United State is doomed without entitlement cuts, Corker seems to endorse the growing Republican realization that President Obama is very likely to win the tax fight. GOP leaders hoped its extortion tack — accept tax breaks for the wealthy or everyone’s taxes go up — would force the White House’s hand, but the plan is clearly failing.
So, as a practical matter, with Republicans starting to fold on taxes, is the broader standoff nearing an end? Not really — what many of the reports have omitted is what else Corker said in the same interview.
Indeed, for all the attention the tax fight is getting, the Tennessean’s comments on the debt ceiling were far more provocative, and infinitely more alarming.
From the transcript:









