The Mercury News

Republican­s pick a debt limit fight at their peril

- By Marc A. Thiessen Marc A. Thiessen is a Washington Post columnist.

Most Americans think the economy is in bad shape, and 6 in 10 blame President Joe Biden. Things could soon get worse: Economists believe there is a 70% likelihood of a recession this year — more than double the share from six months earlier, a Bloomberg survey in December found.

Given all this, House Republican­s should ask themselves: Why on earth would they do anything that could hurt the economy — and give Biden the pretext to shift blame for his economic fiascoes to them?

That's exactly what will happen if Republican­s force a debt limit fight with the president. If the United States reaches the brink of insolvency, myriad problems could follow: The stock market could plummet, interest rates could skyrocket, our national credit rating could be downgraded, millions of jobs could be lost and inflation could climb even further. And Republican­s would assume ownership of the economic debacle. Instead of the “Putin Price Hike,” as Biden has tried to explain gasoline increases, Biden will begin touting the “MAGA Price Hike” — wrapping the poor economy around House Republican­s' necks. Why would the GOP hand Biden that kind of opening?

Note also that the history of presidenti­al elections after debt ceiling fights has not been good for Republican­s.

In 1995, after Republican­s took control of the House with a much larger majority than they have today, Speaker Newt Gingrich, R-Ga., threatened not to raise the debt limit unless President Bill Clinton agreed to $245 billion in tax cuts, restraints on new Medicare and Medicaid spending, and a balanced budget within seven years. Republican­s didn't get most of their demands, and they paid for their brinkmansh­ip the following year, when Clinton won reelection in a 379-159 electoral college landslide.

In 2011, Republican­s again picked a fight over the debt ceiling. This time, it was the Democrats who flinched. President Barack Obama agreed to the Budget Control Act of 2011, which used a blunt instrument — sequestrat­ion — to mandate automatic across-the-board spending cuts if Republican­s and Democrats could not agree on targeted reductions. They did not, with the result that Obama's discretion­ary spending was restrained — but at the cost of massive defense cuts that have hurt our ability to compete with and deter a rising Communist China. In the end, Obama had the last laugh. He won reelection the next year in another electoral college landslide, 332-206.

See a pattern? If Republican­s want to all but guarantee a second Biden term, picking a debt ceiling fight is a great way to do it.

House Speaker Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., has stated there will be no cuts to Medicare and Social Security. So, entitlemen­t programs — the big driver of out-of-control federal spending — are off the table. That leaves only discretion­ary spending.

If Republican­s want to roll back Biden's spending spree, throwing the country into a debt crisis is not the way to do it. Instead, they should do what Democrats did to get the spending passed in the first place: Win. Go out and convince voters to give the GOP control of the Senate, the White House and a bigger House majority. Then they can claw back Biden's profligate spending. Putting the country on the brink of insolvency would have the opposite effect at the polls — making those GOP electoral victories less likely.

I used to believe in using the debt ceiling as leverage, but history is clear: Voters punish the party that plays chicken with the economy.

Now, instead of learning their lesson, Republican­s are picking a debt limit fight — one that is poised to let Biden shift responsibi­lity for his disastrous economic policies onto the GOP. That could cost them their narrow House majority — and, if history is any guide, the presidency.

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