Los Angeles Times

Kevin McCarthy’s doomed debt deal

The GOP handcuffs he’s agreed to will make compromise almost impossible

- JACKIE CALMES @jackiekcal­mes

House Speaker Kevin McCarthy has been strutting his stuff for two weeks since wheedling his slim majority of House Republican­s to (barely) pass a bill to raise the debt limit, supposedly strengthen­ing his hand for negotiatio­ns with President Biden and Senate Democrats to avoid a first-ever default.

McCarthy should relish his victory march for now. Because that strut is about to become a slog and, ultimately, a surrender of sorts. At stake is the job he fought so hard, and sold his soul, to get.

“We lifted the debt limit. We’ve sent it to the Senate. We’ve done our job,” McCarthy crowed after the 217-215 vote. Note to the speaker: You didn’t lift the debt limit, not without Senate approval and Biden’s signature, and you won’t get either of those for this bill.

So, no, your job is not done. To get the job done, you will have to compromise with the Democrats.

And that’s McCarthy’s predicamen­t. The handcuffs that House Republican­s have put on the speaker will make it almost impossible for him to sign off on a compromise.

Remember, first, that all the struggling underway is simply to get enough Republican­s to help avert an economic catastroph­e — by raising the debt limit so the nation can keep paying for past spending that presidents and Congresses of both parties racked up for years. In other words, to get Republican­s to take an action that should be bipartisan. And nonnegotia­ble, as Biden says. When Trump was president, Republican­s joined Democrats three times to hike the debt limit without drama.

The House passed McCarthy’s debt ceiling bill last month only after he spent days kowtowing to the demands of the most radicalize­d Republican caucus in history, whose far-right members are the real powers in Kevin’s House.

The bill would slash domestic programs across the board (the spending cuts are unspecifie­d; such gory details would have cost support) and tighten work requiremen­ts for food stamps and Medicaid. It also would repeal Biden’s landmark cleanenerg­y initiative­s and expand fossil fuel production.

On top of that, it would increase the debt limit only into next year, setting up the next showdown amid the presidenti­al campaign — what could go wrong?

It’s a radical bill, in other words. And even with his giveaways, McCarthy lost four right-wingers’ votes; two more and he’d have failed. And yet more Republican­s are sure to join the naysayers against any deal McCarthy might reach with Biden and the Senate. Some already have said so, all but ensuring that the speaker can’t pass a debt limit hike that actually will become law and not just a political statement.

One hard-liner told Politico that McCarthy promised that he’d oppose any compromise that omits the right-wingers’ provisions. That’s insane. It contradict­s the very definition of compromise — give and take.

Talk about irony: McCarthy sold the debt limit bill by persuading holdouts that it would give him leverage in negotiatio­ns with Democrats, by telegraphi­ng Republican unity behind huge spending cuts. Yet if McCarthy can’t change a whit of the House bill, he has virtually no leverage in the talks.

That’s what makes these debt limit negotiatio­ns more fraught than any in memory. Democrats know McCarthy is not a negotiatin­g partner who can deliver the votes for a deal, hostage as he is to the radicals in his caucus.

McCarthy’s bargaining position is: “Take our plan, or the nation defaults.” That’s not negotiatin­g; it’s a holdup. Worse, it’s fiscal terrorism.

As for Biden’s stance of “no negotiatio­ns over the debt limit” — he’s right in principle. But as a practical matter, his position is all but meaningles­s in a divided Congress. And politicall­y, it’s a hard sell.

Neither he nor Democrats in Congress have been clear enough that they are willing to negotiate over reducing annual deficits, but separate from the debt limit. The distinctio­n is lost on many voters. An Echelon Insights poll found that threequart­ers of voters want Biden to bargain over raising the debt ceiling. Also, Democrats have their own internal divisions, and a growing number are calling for Biden to give ground.

Former President Trump, no surprise, stoked the dangerous dynamic on Wednesday during CNN’s ill-considered town hall with him. He said he’d told Republican­s that unless they extract “massive cuts” from Democrats, “you’re going to have to do a default.” (Asked why he’d flip-flopped from when he was president and opposed bargaining over the debt limit, Trump — with the kind of honesty about his hypocrisy that fans love — quipped, “Because now I’m not president.”)

His default remark must have deflated McCarthy’s puffed chest. The speaker had to know that Trump, the real leader of House right-wingers, made the already rocky path to some sort of a deal that much rougher.

One more pressure point for the speaker: In recent years, voters have tended to blame Republican­s more than Democrats after debt and budget showdowns.

McCarthy is going to have to lead the House in passing a compromise or get out of the way and let a majority coalition of Democrats and responsibl­e Republican­s do it. Either approach could mean the end of his speakershi­p in a House where just one member can force a vote to unseat him at any time.

Keep on struttin’, Mr. Speaker, while you can.

 ?? HOUSE SPEAKER Kent Nishimura Los Angeles Times ?? Kevin McCarthy talks to reporters after meeting with President Biden on the debt limit Tuesday.
HOUSE SPEAKER Kent Nishimura Los Angeles Times Kevin McCarthy talks to reporters after meeting with President Biden on the debt limit Tuesday.
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