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Remember:
It Could Have Been Pelosi
By Bob Beauprez
7/12/11
As
the political tug-of-war wears on
in Washington over a deal on reducing the deficit as part of a
compromise to
raise the debt limit, some conservatives are beginning to fret about
the
possibility of the GOP “caving” (there’s a plethora of definitions of
what
“caving” would be). And, today the media’s attention is focused on
differences
– perceived or genuine – within the GOP Leadership.
Over
the weekend, Speaker Boehner had
a conversation with President Obama that ended with Boehner rejecting
Obama’s recommendation
because it contained a trillion dollar tax increase.
The fact that Boehner even accepted the
President’s invitation to talk raised some eyebrows.
Majority Leader Eric Cantor and others have
consistently said raising taxes is a non-starter in the GOP controlled
House,
and Boehner has again confirmed that position.
Politico.com
asked me to reply to the
following questions in the wake of the weekend’s events:
“Did
Boehner have a choice but to
exclude tax hikes? And does the weekend episode demonstrate that House
Majority
Leader Eric Cantor (Va.) is the real center of power among
rank-and-file House
Republicans, who have the votes to block most any deal?”
Here
is my answer that can also be
seen here:
The
87 Republican House freshmen didn’t
get elected to raise taxes. They
were
sent to Washington to rein in government growth and over spending. They know it; so do the
153 other Republicans
in the House, and the voters who sent them there haven’t forgotten.
Boehner and
Cantor are principled leaders who also know what they can and cannot
get passed
by their majority and what the American people are expecting.
It’s
only normal to speculate about
what Boehner and the GOP will or will not finally get done, and to
obsess about
perceived or genuine differences.
However, I’m grateful that they are the ones
in charge. The real
difference we should remember is the
political dynamic that exists now on Capitol Hill as opposed to two
years
ago.
The
final deal the GOP House puts
forward likely won’t satisfy everybody’s definition of perfect, but it
will be
dramatically better than had Nancy Pelosi still been the Speaker. If the Democrats still had
the majority
cutting spending and shrinking government wouldn’t even be on the table. The only discussion going
on would be about
raising taxes – which ones, and by how much.
Read
it with a link at Townhall
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