Redstate...
Reflections
on the Deficit Deal
Posted by streiff
Tuesday, August 2nd at 2:00PM EDT
I
don’t make claims to prescience and
have no idea what the final product of the current debt ceiling
negotiations
will produce. I’m guessing it will not be as good as the boosters claim
and not
as bad as the partisans on both sides suggest. Make no mistake about
it, the
debate and deal were of historic import. This is the first time that an
increase in the debt ceiling has ever been seriously debated.
It
would be a mistake, I think, to be
discouraged over this deal or to take uncritically the view of my
friend and
colleague Francis Cianfrocca that Obama was a big winner. The left
doesn’t see
it that way. We didn’t win all that we wanted, though I must confess
that I’m
still more than a little unclear on what was expected to be achieved
while
operating in the shadow of a bill that had to be passed, but we moved
the ball
forward and I think we are well positioned for the next round.
Here
is my assessment:
We
won some tactical victories.
On
spending we made some incremental
gains. True, the total deficit reduction package doesn’t look like much
in
light of the long term deficit projections but when looking at those
projections
we need to keep two things in mind. First and foremost, if the people
making
the projections really had insights on what the future looked like they
wouldn’t be drones working at the Congressional Budget Office. They’d
be making
serious money. The future is not just like the past only moreso. The
same CBO’s
ten-year projections in 1995 did not forecast a budget surplus in 1998.
To the
contrary, they predicted a budget deficit of $357 billion. The second
thing to
keep in mind is that you eat an elephant one bite at a time. We didn’t
get into
this mess overnight. We won’t get out of it overnight either.
We
won a significant strategic
victory.
We
won a significant strategic victory
in that the terms of the debate have been altered perhaps permanently.
The idea
that we can no longer spend without consequences has firmly set in the
national
consciousness. We have the Tea Party backed members of the House and
Senate to
thank for that. For the first time a Democrat president has
acknowledged that
entitlement programs will have to be modified. This isn’t to say he’ll
go along
with what we want but putting those programs up for grabs is a sea
change in
our national debate. Reform and rationalization of these programs is
now,
today, a viable goal. That wasn’t the case last year.
What
we won matters and what we lost
doesn’t.
The
“joint commission” is one of the
worst ideas to come down the pike in a while. The idea of splitting
mandatory
cuts 50-50 between defense and discretionary domestic spending is just
wrong.
This isn’t to say there isn’t wasteful defense spending. There is. But
if we’re
going to have wasteful government spending I’d prefer that it be
focused on
killing people and breaking things and not on regulating American
business out
of existence. It isn’t an unalloyed “Satan sandwich”. Cuts are cuts and
I’d
much prefer a round of across the board cuts in 2012 — real, honest to
gosh
cuts — than ephemeral cuts in 2022. Also the baseline for 2012 presumes
the
expiration of the tax rate reductions enacted under President Bush
(President
Bush… President Bush… my heavens how good that sounds). If those rates
are
extended the cuts required of the “joint committee” become larger and
the odds
of across the board near term cuts go way up. Regardless, this “joint
commission”
sunsets when a new debt ceiling bill comes up, which, coincidentally
will
happen shortly after a new Congress is sworn in in 2013. If we win the
Congress
and/or the Presidency there is no reason to continue this deal. If we
lose the
House and see another Obama administration, there is no way the Dems
will keep
this “joint committee.” If we have the status quo we have already won
the
rhetorical battle. In the meantime we should focus our efforts in
getting
whatever good we can out of this beast and go for a better deal next
time
around.
Like
so many victories, military or
political, this one is not clean cut and overwhelming. I do, however,
think
that it is a victory and it is a strategically decisive one in the
deficit
reduction debate.
Read
it at Redstate
|