Townhall...
A Pyrrhic
‘Victory’
By Thomas Sowell
8/10/2011
In
Don Marquis’ classic satirical
book, “Archy and Mehitabel,” Mehitabel the alley cat asks plaintively,
“What
have I done to deserve all these kittens?”
That
seems to be the pained reaction
of the Obama administration to the financial woes that led to the
downgrading
of America’s credit rating, for the first time in history.
There
are people who see no connection
between what they have done and the consequences that follow. But
Barack Obama
is not likely to be one of them. He is a savvy politician who will
undoubtedly
be satisfied if enough voters fail to see a connection between what he
has done
and the consequences that followed.
To
a remarkable extent, he has succeeded,
with the help of his friends in the media and the Republicans’ failure
to
articulate their case. Polls find more people blaming the Republicans
for the
financial crisis than are blaming the President.
Why
was there a financial crisis in
the first place? Because of runaway spending that sent the national
debt up
against the legal limit. But when all the big spending bills were being
rushed
through Congress, the Democrats had such an overwhelming majority in
both
houses of Congress that nothing the Republicans could do made the
slightest
difference.
Yet
polls show that many people today
are blaming the Republicans for the country’s financial problems. But,
by the
time Republicans gained control of the House of Representatives, and
thus
became involved in negotiations over raising the national debt ceiling,
the
spending which caused that crisis in the first place had already been
done --
and done by Democrats.
Had
the Republicans gone along with
President Obama’s original request for a “clean” bill -- one simply
raising the
debt ceiling without any provisions about controlling federal spending
-- would
that have spared the country the embarrassment of having its government
bonds
downgraded by Standard & Poor’s credit-rating agency?
To
believe that would be to believe
that it was the debt ceiling, rather than the runaway spending, that
made
Standard & Poor’s think that we were no longer as good a credit
risk for
buyers of U.S. government bonds. In other words, to believe that is to
believe
that a Congressional blank check for continued record spending would
have made
Standard & Poor’s think that we were a better credit risk.
If
that is true, then why is Standard
& Poor’s still warning that it might have to downgrade
America’s credit
rating yet again? Is that because of the national debt ceiling or
because of
the likelihood of continued runaway spending?
The
national debt ceiling is just one
of the many false assurances that the government gives the voting
public. The
national debt ceiling has never actually stopped the spending that
causes the
national debt to rise to the point where it is getting near that
ceiling. The
ceiling simply gets raised when that happens.
Just
a week before the budget deal was
made at the eleventh hour, it looked like the new Republican majority
in the
House of Representatives had scored a victory by getting the President
and the
Congressional Democrats to give up the idea of raising the tax rates --
and to
cut spending instead. But now that the details are coming out, that
“victory”
looks very temporary, if not illusory.
The
price of getting that deal has
been having the Republicans agree to sitting on a special bipartisan
Congressional committee that will either come to an agreement on
spending cuts
before Thanksgiving or have the budgets of both the Defense Department
and
Medicare cut drastically.
Since
neither side can afford to be
blamed for a disaster like that, this virtually guarantees that the
Republicans
will have to either go along with whatever new spending and taxing that
the
Democrats demand or risk losing the 2012 election by sharing the blame
for
another financial disaster.
In
short, the Republicans have now
been maneuvered into being held responsible for the spending orgy that
Democrats alone had the votes to create. Republicans have been had --
and so
has the country. The recent, short-lived budget deal turns out to be
not even a
Pyrrhic victory for the Republicans. It has the earmarks of a Pyrrhic
defeat.
Read
it at Townhall
|