Yesterday, Donald Trump talked about the debt ceiling in ways that suggested he didn’t know the term’s meaning. Today, the president went a little further.
President Trump said Friday that Democrats should not use the debt ceiling as leverage amid ongoing negotiations between his administration and Congress.
“I can’t imagine anybody using the debt ceiling as a negotiating wedge,” Trump said in the Oval Office, calling the debt limit a “sacred thing in our country.”
Oh, for crying out loud.
Trump may not be able to “imagine anybody using the debt ceiling as a negotiating wedge,” but that was his own party’s strategy when Barack Obama was president. Indeed, in the way of the Republicans’ debt-ceiling crisis in 2011, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) explicitly described the statutory limit as “a hostage that’s worth ransoming.”
It was during this same crisis that a South Carolina congressman named Mick Mulvaney helped lead the way, threatening to push the nation into default unless the party’s demands were met, The young GOP lawmaker at the time not only championed the dangerous scheme, Mulvaney publicly argued that default wouldn’t be a big deal, and undermining the full faith and credit of the United States would carry few consequences.
Mulvaney is now the acting White House chief of staff. He was literally standing near Trump today when the president denounced negotiating around the debt ceiling and called it “sacred.”
And then, of course, there’s Trump’s own record on the subject.









