National Review: The GOP should take default off the table in debt-ceiling negotiations
posted at 10:31 am on January 15, 2013 by Allahpundit
They’re not saying Republicans should cave and raise the debt ceiling across the board, they’re saying the GOP should pass something that lets Treasury continue to borrow only for the purpose of paying interest owed to creditors. Missing those payments would mean true default and a potential meltdown for global markets, which is why Democrats keep talking up the scenario for negotiating leverage. If you take away that leverage by guaranteeing that debt obligations will be met then this becomes just like a more traditional government shutdown, with all non-interest federal spending frozen unless and until Obama agrees to cuts.
The House should pass a bill to redefine the debt limit so that it constrains primary spending but not debt service. Under this reform, a Treasury that had hit the statutory borrowing limit could continue to borrow what it needed exclusively for paying interest on the national debt and to roll over existing debt obligations, but it could not borrow for any other government spending until the limit had been increased. This would take default entirely off the table.
Other spending would have to be put off or reduced, based on the amount of revenue available at any given time, until the debt limit had been raised. Since debt service now amounts to roughly 8 percent of the budget while the deficit is well over 30 percent, this would mean very significant limits on spending until the debt limit had been increased — whether by a large, across-the-board reduction of remaining spending or a partial shutdown of the relevant government programs and services. Both parties would have a strong incentive to come to agreements that prevented the debt limit from being hit, at least for long.
This proposal would improve, rather than undermine, America’s creditworthiness, as it would both avert any possibility of default and compel a discussion about getting our government finances into order.
Is it only the prospect of default on debt obligations that’s keeping Democrats from negotiating? If you read Obama’s opening statement from yesterday’s presser, when he was talking about Congress not paying its bills, he didn’t dwell on the prospect of Treasury not being able to make interest payments. He focused on not being able to pay the troops, not being able to send out Social Security checks, and so on — exactly the type of traditional spending that would be frozen even under NR’s modified debt-ceiling standoff scenario. In other words, he’s already treating this more or less as a traditional government shutdown. And with good reason: If the GOP did categorically refuse to raise the ceiling, Treasury could still cover its interest payments with the new revenue it takes in every day. The Journal gamed that out a few days ago:
Under this approach, the government would pay bills on a day-by-day basis only when it had enough cash on hand from tax receipts and other revenue. On days when it was short of cash, it would postpone all payments until enough cash came in to make that day’s payments. Then it would put off the next day’s payments until enough cash came in to make those, and so on…
Officials appeared to have ruled out as unworkable the idea of prioritizing payments. The U.S. government makes 80 million payments a month. Figuring out which to pay first could be a logistical nightmare…
One area could get special consideration. The report left unanswered whether a delayed-payment regime would have included postponing interest payments on U.S. Treasury securities. Obama administration officials declined to comment on the matter.
Interest payments are delivered over a different system than other federal payments so Geithner could segregate those easily for special attention if need be, which is almost certainly what would happen in order to preserve America’s creditworthiness if it ever did come to this. All National Review is doing, really, is calling on the GOP to codify this scheme, instructing Treasury to prioritize debt obligations over other spending (and to engage in limited borrowing if necessary to meet those obligations) so that the world’s bondholders don’t have a panic attack while Congress and the White House try to reach a deal on cuts.
But that raises the question: If the goal here is to turn this into a traditional government shutdown, why not forget the debt ceiling and use the expiration of this year’s allotment of federal spending in March as an opportunity to shut down the government and extract cuts? Ed has an entire column up at The Week today making the case for that strategy. If you want (a) deep spending cuts, (b) leverage for Republicans in the form of a shutdown, and (c) minimal risk of a global financial panic that could drive the country into a deeper economic rut, use the expiration of this year’s continuing resolution on the budget to fight for reduced spending instead of the debt ceiling. More from Ed:
Of course, Republicans remember all too well that they attempted to force a budget victory in 1995 over Bill Clinton with a government shutdown, and ended up losing the political war. That case, however, differed from today in a couple of significant ways. The deficit was much smaller, although still politically potent, and Clinton had already started to triangulate after the 1994 midterm fiasco for Democrats. The budget standoff looked much less like a crisis than a public-relations stunt for the new Contract with America majority. In this case, the crisis is obvious and very potent politically, although not certain by any means to favor Republicans. It will take a great deal of effort to get the messaging started immediately for a March 27 standoff over budgeting for the rest of FY2013, an effort that Republicans haven’t done much in the last two weeks to push.
The GOP should forget the ghosts of 1995 and force the showdown over the real issue — out-of-control spending. At this point, after the beating Republicans took in November and the disarray after the New Years Day fiscal-cliff deal, they don’t have much to lose, especially by fighting on the high ground and forcing Democrats to defend inflated spending.
Supposedly Boehner and the House GOP leadership are already trying to steer the caucus towards taking a stand on the continuing resolution rather than the debt ceiling. But even if it happens and the government shuts down for a few days, is there any reason to think they won’t cave? What kind of cuts are they expecting from a Democratic president and Democratic Senate? A shutdown is always risky, but in ’95 the GOP was at least coming off a huge midterm win the year before with public opinion presumably on their side. As it is, Gabe Malor sees a replay of the fiscal cliff debacle, where tea-party congressmen vote no and the rest of the caucus gets nervous about a public backlash and votes with Democrats to pass something lame.
Exit question: Which option does the “let it burn” crowd favor here? The point of LIB is to force Democrats to fully own the fiscal mess they’ve made and to force voters to live with the consequences of electing those Democrats, so presumably you guys want the GOP to vote “present” on the debt ceiling and let the Dems keep borrowing until the whole budgetary facade finally collapses, yes?
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so glad i voted for Cruz
burserker on May 23, 2013 at 7:13 PM
You survived, so be happy.
Geesh, yankees and their whining…
cozmo on May 23, 2013 at 7:16 PM
cozmo on May 23, 2013 at 7:16 PM
I’m not whining. we’re supposed to get hit w/ some major weather this weekend-and for the first time this year…the local weather chick mentioned the potential for…tornadoes.
Awesome!
*crosses fingers.*
annoyinglittletwerp on May 23, 2013 at 7:19 PM
I agree and Romney was selected for Obama’s re-election imo.
bluefox on May 23, 2013 at 7:20 PM
Have you two and any others from Texas seen this?
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/3022970/posts
bluefox on May 23, 2013 at 7:22 PM
Yeah, you won’t be thinking that if it happens noob. You are in exactly the wrong kind of terrain to want that.
Never seen a tornado, and don’t want to. Grapefruit sized hail was bad enough.
cozmo on May 23, 2013 at 7:22 PM
bluefox on May 23, 2013 at 7:22 PM
I’ve seen it. Power corrupts. Absolute power corrupts absolutely.
annoyinglittletwerp on May 23, 2013 at 7:30 PM
There are good and bad to those bills.
The one I am most familiar with is the third one. I make it a point to avoid toll roads. I figure when 0bama leaves office and the economy improves, most of the yankees who are clogging up the roads will go back to where they came from.
The rainy day fund is over funded as it is. The reporting of contributors is over rated and I think they should remove the exclusion for labor groups. I think full disclosure is alright, especially when it removes caps.
cozmo on May 23, 2013 at 7:33 PM
Reid: “Will no one rid me of this turbulent senator?”
applebutter on May 23, 2013 at 7:41 PM
I absolutely adore Ted Cruz. He makes me so proud that he’s a member of the Senate. Thank you Texas for sending him there. He is carrying on in the spirit of Ronald Reagan. He eloquently makes his points without resorting to hyperbole and name-calling, something from which McCain and the other Democrats cannot refrain. He is always upbeat and good-humored and he commands respect as a result.
GeorgiaBuckeye on May 23, 2013 at 7:51 PM
Yes! Finally, a national politician that gets it!
JeffPBlues on May 23, 2013 at 7:55 PM
Team Cruz
WhatSlushfund on May 23, 2013 at 8:07 PM
I disagree with that, bluefox. McCain, clearly Left, even outright encouraging voters to support Obama (“my friends, you have nothing to fear from an Obama Presidency”).
Romney, no, my opinion is he really wanted the Presidency, as did Ryan the VPcy. They appear to have been burdened once again with the Progressive goals of the Progressives in the GOP.
Lourdes on May 23, 2013 at 8:14 PM
How old I this POS?Do we have any hope?
redware on May 23, 2013 at 8:28 PM
I wish SC had him instead of Grahamnesty. The latter is a sell-out and a fraud.
Conservchik on May 23, 2013 at 8:36 PM
So true and we’re certainly seeing it from D.C. Glad you had a chance to see that article.
bluefox on May 23, 2013 at 8:39 PM
I get that the Senate is seniority-based and for McCain he abhors first term Senators speaking. Like children they should be seen and not heard. But there comes a point when this isn’t defending the institution and nothing more than a cranky old bastard attacking people he hates. We are at that point. Good for Cruz for poking a stick at the fossil!
Happy Nomad on May 23, 2013 at 8:43 PM
Sounds like you’re on top of things out there. I was concerned with the Senate Bill 346 (SB 346) since it is designed to discourage people from giving to Tea Party groups who wish to replace RINO’s with conservatives. It is a Saul Alinsky device to identify donors so they can be targeted and then discouraged from giving to conservatives.
A commenter on the site said: Looks like SB 346 is sponsored by these two RINO’s:
Sen Kel Selinger (Rino – Amarillo)
Sen Charlie Geren (Rino – Fort Worth)
I would hope that Gov. Perry will veto this or else it becomes law by 5/23/13.
Anytime I see anything that is against or limits the Tea Parties, I suspect Rove & Co:-)
bluefox on May 23, 2013 at 8:46 PM
A good speech and some nice legs.
Sherman1864 on May 23, 2013 at 8:49 PM
I agree. I think the strategy was to be clear in the difference of maker vs. taker, and thought the majority of Americans could easily see where the country would go with 4 more years of communist lite.
He was wrong and rightfully shocked, as I was, that Obama won.
The biggest mistake in our history. Lazy purists and just plain lazy detached people have allowed the republic to burn.
Mimzey on May 23, 2013 at 8:49 PM
That’s true too and makes one wonder why doesn’t it? I can’t recall many R’s from the House or Senate that campaigned for Romney or publically supported him tho. I do recall them criticizing him about Benghazi tho:-)
However, Gingrich campaigned for him:-)
bluefox on May 23, 2013 at 8:50 PM
Do you think Trey Gowdy might run for the Senate against Graham?
bluefox on May 23, 2013 at 8:54 PM
I want to have his baby.
Theworldisnotenough on May 23, 2013 at 9:17 PM
McCain enabled Obama he could not bring himself to call out Obama’s commie roots or his radical past.
He does manage to low dog any and all conservatives in the Republican Party.
Blame him for his sins.
APACHEWHOKNOWS on May 23, 2013 at 9:35 PM
Cruz is giving conservatives a great gift… A slow and painful coronary to the senior Sen from AZ.
katy on May 23, 2013 at 9:35 PM
Just remember that when John McLame calls you “friend,” what he means
is “You stupid-ignorant dumb-a$$ not worthy of my attention.”
shorebird on May 23, 2013 at 9:53 PM
We have to draft Trey Gowdy! If we South Carolinians want to have a shot at getting rid of Lefty Lindsey,Gowdy is the only one who could do it!
redware on May 23, 2013 at 10:05 PM
Bravo. McCain is disgusting.
kunegetikos on May 23, 2013 at 10:09 PM
Johnny McCain or Jimmy Carville…
Which trusts Obama mostest, Hobbitses?
ndanielson on May 23, 2013 at 10:19 PM
Bravo. McCain is disgusting.
kunegetikos on May 23, 2013 at 10:09 PM
Hobbit!
ndanielson on May 23, 2013 at 10:20 PM
McCain’s a spoiled princess who needs to learn to suck it up regrading Cruz, just like his other Senatorial friend with escalating dementia, Harry Reid.
Anti-Control on May 23, 2013 at 10:23 PM
All you do is spout.
alanstern on May 23, 2013 at 10:28 PM
It would be great if Trey Gowdy would primary Graham, but it will not happen. Graham has the SC State Pub. party in his pocket and they are not about to let a congressman primary Lucy Graham. Gowdy would be committing political suicide if he lost the primary. The person to primary Lucy would be Demint. Demint culd beat Lucy in a primary and would have the support of tea parties from across the USA who hate Lucy. Demint also helped others get elected and they owe him. All Demint has to do is to say, Lindsay Graham is not a conservative and SC needs a conservative Sen. to represent their values and to support conservatism, and Lucy is not representing SC voters, he is representing the special interests. SC voters need to put pressure on Demint to primary Lucy.
they lie on May 23, 2013 at 10:39 PM
Excellent post!
Anti-Control on May 23, 2013 at 10:46 PM
It’s reaaly difficult to defeat an incumbent. Romney deserves a lot of credit for trying. Unfortunately Obama’s media support, and the near universal support of the black community made him impossible to defeat.
There were also some notes about very high black turnout in the past election. Given the remarkable 100% turnout in some black precincts in places like Philadelphia which then went 100% for Obama, and the reports of people like the Ohio Democrat who admitted to casting multiple ballots for Obama, one has to wonder how much of a role voter fraud played as well.
talkingpoints on May 23, 2013 at 10:47 PM
So glad Cruz is in the Senate. He and a couple others are slowing down the destruction Reid/Schumer/Durbin/Graham/McCain are orchestrating. It’s nice to see what a “minority of the minority” can do.
It’s be nice to see what the majority of House could do.
ritewhit on May 23, 2013 at 10:50 PM
McCain is an idiot wrapped up in a moron. He is so deluded and a severe lack of common sense. Hopefully some Tea Party Conservative will primary his ass out of the Senate
hamradio on May 23, 2013 at 11:06 PM
Why would the chinless wonder want to silence McLame? They’re on the same (other) side.
The senate is the ultimate Old Boy’s Club, and being senator has got to be the sweetest job in the world. Get elected once and the odds are heavily in your favor that the seat is yours for life. As long as you don’t, you know, make any waves. McConnell doesn’t like the wacko-birds any more than McLame, but with the need to get re-elected coming up he’s doing the traditional “Look-At-Me-I’m-A-Conservative” butching-up that all the GOPe’s seem to do right before elections. Think he likes Rand Paul either?
bofh on May 23, 2013 at 11:14 PM
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