Weekly Opinion Editorial
THE SKY IS FALLING!
by Steve Fair
The debt ceiling is the maximum amount the U.S. government can borrow by
issuing bonds. The U.S. Treasury
Department must find other ways to pay expenses when the debt ceiling is
reached, otherwise there is a risk the county will default on its debt. Since 1960, Congress has raised, extended, or
revised the debt limit 78 times. 49 of
those were under Republican presidents and 29 times under a Democrat president. In
recent years, raising the cap has become a political football. Since raising the debt ceiling is a so-called
‘must-pass’ bill, both political Parties use it to gain leverage for
concessions. Three observations:
First, House Republicans have put a solid proposal on the table. In late April, the U.S. House narrowly passed
a bill that raises the debt ceiling while cutting spending by 14% over the next
ten years. It also rolled back some
health mandates and climate change recently implemented by the Biden
administration. It also expanded gas and
oil exploration. The bill had no chance
of being passed in the Democratic controlled Senate and immediately upon its
passage Biden said he would veto it if it got to his desk.
Second, Democrats have put no proposal on the table. Their position is to just raise the ceiling-
no concessions, no spending cuts. In the
past, the Ds have used the debt ceiling crisis to raise taxes on the American
people, but raising taxes isn’t in this year’s playbook. With increasing inflation, they recognize raising
taxes would be an unpopular move and would hurt them in the 2024
elections. Democrats instead have
focused their attack on House Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-CA), telling him to ‘put
the pin back in the grenade.’ They anticipate
the Rs will cave to public pressure.
Third, fiscal issues are going to be the ruin of America. The federal national debt is $32 trillion dollars
($95,000 for every man, woman and child) and growing at an accelerating pace. The federal government- both Parties- spend
too much money. Three years ago, a bi-partisan
group of 60 House members introduced HR 6139 that proposed raising the debt
ceiling if government spending were reduced by just 5% over ten years. It failed.
Reasonable proposals to get spending under control are attacked as extreme. Shifting debt to future generations is irresponsible
and immoral, but the federal government has been doing it for decades.
In years past, conservatives were defined by their position on fiscal
issues. Conservatives today are more
interested in liberty, personal freedom, and government overreach- all while
the fiscal house is ablaze. Like an expanding credit card balance, the national
debt continues to escalate, waiting for a responsible generation to pay it off.
Ten years ago, U.S. Senator Tom Coburn, (R-OK), said the debt ceiling
doesn’t exist and the U.S. would not default if the limit wasn’t raised. “The debt ceiling has never not been
raised, so there is no debt ceiling.
Having a debt ceiling and then automatically raising it every time
allows politicians off the hook for making hard choices. I am not saying we shouldn’t pay our
bills. What I am saying is we should put
ourselves in the position to have to make hard choices regarding spending,” Coburn said.
In his book, “The Debt Limit,” Coburn exhorts Americans to stop blaming
lobbyists and special interests for the gridlock and obstructionism in the U.S.
government. He blames citizens for not
holding members of Congress-in both Parties- accountable for refusing to take
bold steps of action to get the government spending under control.
Until more conservatives pay attention to fiscal issues, hold elected officials accountable , and demand spending cuts, expect the ‘Chicken Little/Debt Ceiling,’ performance to keep making curtain calls.
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