Enforcing the Debt Deal...
By Dick Morris & Eileen McGann
Published on DickMorris.com on August
1, 2011
If
the Republicans, led by Senate
Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, opt for a deal with the Democrats to
aim for
big spending cuts, in two phases, but to raise the debt limit so it is
out of
the way until after the 2012 elections, how do we make Obama agree to
cuts?
The
current discussions focus on
triggers which would automatically impose cuts in programs near and
dear to
both party’s hearts -- Medicare for the Democrats and Defense of the
Republicans -- if the spending cuts are not realized.
But these triggers mean next to nothing. What a Congress passes,
another Congress can
repeal. One can
easily see Congress not
coming to agreement on the second wave of cuts and then passing a
resolution to
suspend the trigger-mandated cuts.
The
blunt fact is that once the debt
limit is raised until after the election, Obama can get out of town and
not
worry anymore. He
won’t make any cuts. We’ll
get the cuts we are implementing right
now -- about a trillion over ten years -- and no more.
But
there is a trigger which can work
-- the budget itself.
If
the Continuing Resolution passed in
the spring was battle one (which Obama won) and the debt limit was
battle two
(which the GOP has won), the budget for 2011-12 is battle three.
The
Republicans should refuse to pass
a budget but just pass a new Continuing Resolution funding the
government
through January 1, 2012. If
the
recommendations of the spending cut commission are not passed or some
other
cuts have not replaced them, the House should refuse to extend the
Continuing
Resolution and should trigger a government shutdown.
The
looming threat of a shutdown will
terrify Obama and will force his hand just as the debt limit has done.
We
have gotten half a loaf in this
current battle over the debt. Let’s
not
disarm until we win the rest of it.
What
we haven’t gotten in the debt deal, we can get in the budget deal.
That’s
the trigger which will work.
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