Townhall...
Republicans
Must Vote Against Raising
Debt Ceiling or Face Political Annihilation
By Matt Towery
7/13/2011
The
Republicans surged to majority
status in the U.S. House of Representatives in November 2010 thanks in
large
part to the support of many independent voters who shifted their
allegiance to
the GOP. But the party’s candidates risk losing that support, and also
losing
the voter intensity and enthusiasm they would otherwise likely enjoy in
November 2012, if congressional Republicans sign on to any legislative
scheme
that raises the federal debt ceiling. It’s just that simple.
Polls
indicate that most of those who
identify themselves as either Republican or independent voters say
definitively
that they don’t want the debt ceiling raised, regardless of what
alleged remedy
might be used to justify such action. Yes, they have heard the dire
warnings in
recent days of potential economic disaster, unpaid Social Security
benefits and
even elimination of their own personal credit cards if the debt ceiling
isn’t
raised. They don’t care because they don’t trust these doomsday
statements.
Specifically,
they recall the TARP
program. That’s the congressional action that not only “saved” banks
and
automakers, but led just a few years later to record profits for those
institutions. That’s money that never reached the public.
Too
many people still can’t get a
loan. Others are hounded by credit card companies if they are a day
late in
paying their bills. And Americans are still paying hefty prices for
cars and
trucks that must be fueled by increasingly expensive gasoline.
These
voters simply don’t believe the
assurances of President Obama, particularly in light of his stimulus
program
that promised the nation an 8 percent unemployment rate that hasn’t
materialized.
The
GOP leadership in the House has
slowly come to realize that any deal they agree to that doesn’t include
major
budget cuts -- which by necessity would include cuts to entitlement
programs --
will result in a stunning rebuke from conservative and independent
voters.
After all, those voters put the Republicans in charge in large part to
avoid
slick compromise deals and halfhearted efforts to rein in spending.
But
the GOP leadership in the Senate
seems even now not get it. Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell’s
proposal to
give Obama the authority to raise the ceiling is a nonstarter with most
conservative Republicans. It smacks of game-playing and shirking the
duty of
making tough choices.
Senators
who try to play the
deal-making heroes on this one will destroy not only their own
credibility, but
that of the entire Republican Party. Instead, they must remind
Americans that
the nation would not be facing this crisis were it not for the Obama
administration’s unbridled spending.
I
completely understand what is at
stake here. If the United States fails to raise its debt ceiling by
Aug. 2, we
face a serious devaluation of the dollar across the globe, a dire
threat to the
nation’s overall financial status and possibly even an inability to pay
entitlement benefits for seniors, and for Medicaid and welfare
recipients. Of
course, all this is theoretical.
The
reality is that a majority of
Americans are prepared for a few days of pain to prove to the world
that we can
and will find a way to control our reckless spending. Polling conducted
earlier
this year indicates that a majority of Republicans and independents
would support
a government shutdown akin to those of late 1995 and early 1996.
Why?
Because they’ve adopted as their
own the concept put forth in the early days of the Obama presidency by
then-White House Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel -- namely, that one can
take advantage
of a crisis and put it to maximum use in achieving bigger and broader
aims.
But
Emanuel’s crisis-exploitation
formula was to swiftly spend boatloads of money. The Republicans’
counter-solution should be to take advantage of the government’s fiscal
crisis
by allowing the nation to suffer for a few days while Congress and the
president sober up from the past two years of spending and make the
tough cuts
in spending that must be made.
There
is another hidden reason why
most Americans are willing to endure the pain of bumping up against our
nation’s debt ceiling. They see their own financial circumstances as
being so
bad that they don’t see a downside to drastic action to stem federal
spending
-- especially if standing firm, at least for a while, will make those
who
profited from prior costly bailouts and stimulus efforts now have to
share in
the financial pain being felt by so many Americans.
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it at Townhall
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