The Columbus Dispatch

Dems should call GOP’s ‘ doomsday’ bluff

- PAUL KRUGMAN Paul Krugman writes for The New York Times. oped@nytimes.com @PaulKrugma­n

Back in the depths of the Cold War, people used to talk about “doomsday machines,” devices that could destroy the world. The main idea was that it could provide deterrence.

But there also was the notion that a madman with access to such a device could use it for blackmail: “Give me what I want or I’ll blow everything up.”

The good news is that this never happened on the nuclear front. The bad news is that a form of doomsdayma­chine politics — in which you threaten to blow up things that you care about, because you think your rivals care about them more — is playing out in Washington right now, courtesy of the Republican Party.

Doomsday-machine politics made its first U.S. appearance in the 1990s, when Republican­s shut down the federal government in an attempt to extract concession­s from Bill Clinton.

That didn’t go well for the GOP. But Republican­s tried again, with more success, in 2011, using the threat of refusing to raise the debt ceiling to win policy concession­s from Barack Obama.

And even though they now control the White House as well as Congress, Republican­s are still in the doomsday-machine business — and what they’re currently threatenin­g to blow up is health care for nearly 9 million children.

GOP leaders are in trouble. They need to pass a “continuing resolution” to maintain funding for the government and avoid a shutdown. But despite control of both houses of Congress, they don’t have the votes.

Why not? In the House, the main problem was ultra-right-wing members, who don’t want to support even routine spending. Still, Republican­s didn’t need Democrats to get a bill through.

However, passing the bill in the Senate will require 60 votes. With only 51 Republican­s, Democratic votes are needed.

Once upon a time a party that needed some help from across the aisle would have sought a deal that made some concession­s to the other party’s agenda. And until a few days ago it seemed as if normal political rules still applied.

A bipartisan group of senators reached a deal that would have met a key Democratic priority: protecting the “Dreamers” — young people who were brought to the United States illegally as children. And in return for that agreement, Democrats would have been willing to help keep the government running.

Protecting the Dreamers is, by the way, enormously popular, even among Republican­s, so it’s not as if the GOP would be giving up a lot. But Donald Trump torpedoed the deal, apparently because he doesn’t want immigrants from certain countries.

So Republican leaders have come up with another doomsday threat, this time aimed at children.

You see, back in 1997 a bipartisan deal created the Children’s Health Insurance Program, or CHIP, an expansion of Medicaid to cover children who might not otherwise have been eligible. CHIP has been a huge success story, at modest cost.

But Republican­s allowed CHIP funding to expire almost four months ago. Since then, they’ve kept promising to do something, but haven’t. And now they’ve attached an extension of the program to passage of a continuing resolution, believing this will force Democrats to give them what they want.

The thing is, GOP politician­s claim to support CHIP; while there isn’t a lot of polling on the issue, what there is suggests overwhelmi­ng popular support, including among Republican voters, for continuing the program.

Yet GOP leaders seem to believe that they can bully Democrats by threatenin­g to hurt millions of children — because Democrats care more about those children than they do. They also believe that if this tactic fails they can frame it as an exhibition of callousnes­s by Democrats.

Democrats should just say no. These tactics cannot be allowed to succeed.

For, once doomsdayma­chine politics becomes the norm, anything is fair game. Give us what we want, or we’ll cut off Medicare. Give us what we want, or we’ll destroy Social Security.

This has to stop. And now is the time to draw the line.

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