The National - News

With the debt ceiling deal, Biden has again delivered what he said he would

- HUSSEIN IBISH Hussein Ibish is a senior resident scholar at the Arab Gulf States Institute and a US affairs columnist for The National

Afew days ago, in these pages, I predicted that the ongoing debt ceiling crisis would reveal US president Joe Biden to be finally out of his depths or have unexpected depths of sophistica­tion. Or, I added, a jerryrigge­d agreement could simply postpone a day of reckoning.

The first scenario has been avoided as Mr Biden has neatly escaped a dangerous trap. The emerging solution appears to be a combinatio­n of scenarios two and three: a familiar deal that vindicates several of the President’s defining strategies.

On Saturday night, Mr Biden and Kevin McCarthy, the Republican Speaker of the House of Representa­tives, announced an agreement to extend the debt ceiling for two years in exchange for strikingly narrow spending cuts and caps.

Many significan­t details are not yet known, but the broad outlines are clear. The White House and the House of Representa­tives have done a fairly standard deal, at least when Democrats hold the presidency. Republican presidents ask for, and receive, unconditio­nal debt ceiling expansions, which allow the Treasury Department to borrow money to pay for debts already incurred by Congress.

However, a pattern has emerged whereby Republican­s do not extend this courtesy to Democratic presidents. Republican­s suddenly remember that they are supposed to be alarmed at national budget deficits and debts, no matter whether they are becoming a greater or lesser percentage of GDP.

Many Democrats were petrified that Mr Biden, negotiatin­g almost entirely in secret and apparently on Republican terms, was poised to cheerfully give up far too much to avoid a massive crisis. Yet this does not appear to have happened.

The actual cuts in spending are extremely limited, and even the caps to spending increases seem to hew reasonably well to major White House goals developed under the last Congress. Republican­s gained a symbolic sop – at least in terms of national expenditur­e, although undoubtedl­y with alarming significan­ce for many individual­s and families – with some potential restrictio­ns on nutritiona­l and other support for poor people and, more importantl­y, new work requiremen­ts on “able-bodied” individual­s without dependents.

Savings will be decidedly modest. For Republican­s, it’s a matter of principle. And while few Democrats are going to be happy about these changes, even fewer will be kept up at night. It was a big win for one side, in their own eyes, and not much of a loss for most people on the other side.

The numbers are not going to be huge. For Republican­s, it’s a matter of principle. And while few Democrats are going to be happy about these changes, even fewer are going to be kept up at night. It was a big win for one side, in their own eyes, and not that much of a loss for most people on the other side.

On the other hand, Mr Biden appears to have protected much of the most important spending he was able to secure in the first two years after his election. Total spending cutbacks over 10 years under these terms may be limited to a mere $650 billion.

Mr Biden had no white rabbit to pull out of his hat, no brilliant and unanticipa­ted gimmick, or unexpected genius solution. As is so often the case with the wily old fox, the President’s superpower is his normality, transparen­cy and predictabi­lity. While he disingenuo­usly insisted he would never negotiate over budget issues with the debt ceiling being effectivel­y held hostage – of course, that’s exactly what he did – from the onset he stressed the two biggest themes of his presidency: bipartisan compromise and political patience.

This approach and rhetoric has consistent­ly infuriated many progressiv­e Democrats. But it has just as consistent­ly worked. It is exactly what secured the huge pandemic bailout which began his term. And the hard infrastruc­ture act. And the high-tech investment act. And the social spending and climate change bill. And more besides. Very little of that appears meaningful­ly threatened, indeed it would be more accurate to say it largely has been protected, by the terms of this agreement.

In effect, Mr Biden has again delivered what he said he would, in exactly the way he said he would do it, despite numerous doubts, including my own, particular­ly as the witching hour approached. The Treasury Department, by the way, has cited next Wednesday as the first day a potential default might begin. Presumably it’s ready to come up with a few last-ditch workaround­s to buy extra time to test the legislativ­e viability of the agreement.

And here’s where Mr Biden truly got the better of Mr McCarthy. Both leaders now must sell a compromise agreement that no one is going to be happy with to members of Congress on both sides, including the Democratic progressiv­e-left and Republican hard-right. While their tasks may be roughly similar, the obstacles and consequenc­es for failure each face are different.

The murmurs of unease among progressiv­es is extremely muted compared to categorica­l opposition already emanating from right-wing conservati­ves. It may not be simple or comfortabl­e for the President to get his House ducklings in a row, but it just may not be possible for the House Speaker.

And now the political calculatio­n has completely flipped. Before this agreement, there was every reason to suspect the sitting president would face most of the blame for any financial calamity. But if the Republican House Speaker makes a solemn agreement with the President to save the economy, and that is sabotaged by his own extremist faction, they, and he, will be left holding the bag alone.

Unless Democrats make the unimaginab­le blunder of opposing the agreement in sufficient numbers to create a real obstacle to passage, which seems highly unlikely, this has now become an internal Republican problem and probably crisis. There will be members of the extreme right who will tell Mr McCarthy they didn’t support him for Speaker so that he could release the only real “bargaining chip” hostage they have for such limited restrictio­ns. It will be very surprising not to start hearing hyperbolic fulminatin­g about betrayal, treason and a war against the country’s fiscal sanity and financial future.

In the old Roadrunner cartoons, the hapless predator Wile E Coyote – a self-declared “super-genius” – produces one apparently ingenious trap after another, only, in horror, to find himself holding the bomb just as it is about to explode. In the coming days, the House Speaker may discover he, too, is unexpected­ly in possession of a round, black, hissing object that his vanished opponent has surreptiti­ously managed to hand back to him.

Biden had no white rabbit to pull out of his hat – his superpower is his normality, transparen­cy and predictabi­lity

 ?? AP ?? Democrats and Republican­s reached an ‘agreement in principle’ on the debt limit on Saturday
AP Democrats and Republican­s reached an ‘agreement in principle’ on the debt limit on Saturday
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