WASHINGTON & SANTA FE, NM (By NYT) November 24, 2011 ― The smoke from the smoldering failure known as the deficit “supercommittee” spread heavily across Capitol Hill on Monday, allowing Republicans to obscure the simple truth about the failure to reach an agreement.
The only reason the
committee failed was
because Republicans
refused to raise
taxes on the rich,
and, in fact, wanted
to cut them even
below their current
bargain-basement
level.
Republicans in
Washington claimed
Democrats refused to
budge on
entitlements. John
Boehner, the House
speaker, and Mitt
Romney, a Republican
presidential
candidate, as if by
rote, issued
statements saying it
was all President
Obama’s fault.
But, had a single
Republican on the
panel endorsed even
a modest increase in
upper-income tax
rates, Republicans
could have won
trillions in cuts
from entitlements
and discretionary
spending. (Certainly
far beyond anything
we would endorse.)
None would take that
courageous step, and
now it seems foolish
to have expected
that they would. In
July, they rejected
a “grand bargain”
from President Obama
that would have cut
$1 trillion in
domestic and defense
spending, and $650
billion from
Medicare, Medicaid
and Social Security,
all because it would
have raised tax
revenues by $1.2
trillion. They
dismissed Mr.
Obama’s second offer
in September, which
would have cut $3.6
trillion from the
deficit, 60 percent
from spending cuts.
And, naturally, they
rejected the
proposal from
supercommittee
Democrats to cut at
least $3 trillion
from the deficit,
because a third of
it would have come
from higher taxes on
the rich. When you
hear Republicans
claim that Democrats
refused to touch
their sacred cows of
spending, remember
that the Democratic
offer would have cut
$475 billion from
Medicare and
Medicaid over 10
years, nearly half
of which would have
come directly from
beneficiaries.
That’s more than the
Bowles-Simpson
deficit plan
proposed, and eight
times the level of
Medicare cuts
offered by President
Obama in September.
These plans actually
tipped too far in
the direction of
spending cuts. By
comparison, the
Republican offers
were risible. One
pretended to raise
revenue by $300
billion, while
actually calling for
the Bush tax cuts to
be permanent and
even reducing the
top bracket to 28
percent from 35
percent. The
consequences of this
failure are serious.
FORCED SPENDING
CUTS
The most immediate
result will be an
automatic cut in
federal spending of
$1.2 trillion, which
will
disproportionately
affect defense
programs. That cut,
though, doesn’t take
effect until 2013,
which means that
Congress will spend
the next year trying
to reconfigure it or
come up with a real
deficit plan.
Expect to hear a
huge wailing from
the good friends of
military contractors
in Congress, mostly
Republicans, who
will try to use
every budgetary
choke point to undo
the defense
sequester, possibly
starting as soon as
next month, when the
current continuing
resolution financing
the government runs
out.
Cutting one-tenth of
the military budget
is hardly a real
threat to national
security, and it is
fitting that the
sequester hits
defense particularly
hard because the
first $900 billion
in cuts in the law
creating the
supercommittee came
out of nondefense
domestic spending.
An across-the-board
cut of $55 billion a
year is a terrible
way to achieve cuts
in the Pentagon’s
budget. But the
president and
Democrats in
Congress should hold
firm to their pledge
not to undo this
sequester until
Republicans give in
on their pledge
never to raise taxes
on the rich.
Any lawmaker who
fears devastating
cuts to the armed
forces should
explain why they
consider it more
important to keep
upper-bracket taxes
historically low.
THE RISK TO
RECOVERY
The supercommittee
drew the focus away
from the more
important task of
creating jobs. But
that need is coming
right up with the
renewal of the
payroll tax cut and
unemployment
insurance, both of
which expire at the
end of the year.
Without them, the
economy could lose
up to 2 percentage
points of its
potential growth in
2012. A deal by the
panel probably could
have included both
measures, but now
Republicans are
talking about trying
to extort a deal,
possibly involving
the Bush tax cuts,
which expire at the
end of 2012.
The formation of the
deficit panel was an
acknowledgment that
the regular budget
process had also
failed, largely
because of the
60-vote rule in the
Senate, which
Republicans have
made routine. With
the panel’s
collapse, the
process now returns
to the usual
open-air infighting,
which is an alarming
thought, but at
least will make it
clear which side is
refusing to cut the
payroll tax and
extend jobless
benefits.
It will also
illuminate the
Republican fixation
on preserving the
Bush tax cuts. By
refusing the
Democrats’ proposals
on the panel,
Republicans clearly
figured that they
might win the next
election and keep
the cuts. But even
if they win the
White House, getting
to the necessary 60
votes in the Senate
would still be a
long shot.
Until then,
Democrats should
press their
advantage. No matter
what happens next
November, by the
time of the next
postelection
lame-duck session,
Republicans may be
so fearful of the
military sequester
and the expiring
cuts that they might
agree to a deal that
preserves the cuts
for the middle class
while ending them
for the rich.
Americans should
know that that was a
deal that could have
been reached last
summer.











