Slouching Toward the Inevitable Failure of the Super Committee
Did you hear the one about the bipartisan debt committee that failed to come up with a bipartisan proposal to reduce the debt? From today's Washington Post:
If the congressional "supercommittee" cannot agree on a plan to tame the federal debt by next week's deadline, as now appears likely, here's what will happen: nothing.
The automatic spending cuts that were supposed to force the panel to deliver more palatable options would not take effect until January 2013. That leaves lawmakers a full year to devise alternatives.
What sort of alternatives? Well, how about just ignoring the automatic spending reductions, which occur through a mechanism known as a sequester, which don't even represent cuts from today's spending levels, entirely?
Republicans don't like the trigger's defense cuts. And Democrats aren't too thrilled with cutting Medicare, especially if Republicans override any triggered cuts in defense spending.
But that's exactly what a number of Republicans have proposed to do. Last month Sen. John McCain made this very clear, saying "As far as I'm concerned, I will fight any additional cuts in defense spending" that result from the trigger. Via TPM:
"If there's a failure on the part of the super committee, we will be amongst the first on the floor to nullify that provision," McCain said. "Congress is not bound by this — it's something we passed; we can reverse it."
Nor is McCain the only Republican who's made a vow like this. Sens. Graham and Kyl, as well as Rep. Buck MKeon, have said much the same thing.
What then? If Republicans reverse the defense cuts, Democrats won't be happy, and may want to see the Meducare cuts tossed out too. As The Washington Post's Ezra Klein noted earlier this week, "Democrats aren't going to be enthusiastic about keeping the part meant to penalize them for the supercommittee's failure while helping Republicans move the bit that was meant to be their punishment."
Each party, in other words, is mortified by the prospect of seeing its favorite type of spending hit with sequester reductions, which the Post describes as "unprecedented cuts to the Pentagon and other agency budgets." Just how dramatic would these cuts be? Once again, it's worth looking at the following chart prepared by Reason columnist and Mercatus Center senior research fellow Veronique de Rugy:
This is what the spending restraint mechanism that's got both parties terrified looks like. And that should tell you something about why these bipartisan committees always end in failure, and why the nation's legislators have set the country on such a perilous fiscal path.
In other news, the national debt hit $15 trillion this week.
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Enter Super President!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ym6aoOIRnOc
That leaves lawmakers a full year to devise alternatives.
My money is on "Pretend there IS no problem".
"Congress is not bound by this ? it's something we passed; we can reverse it."
"Don't you people know a joke when you hear one?"
I'm hoping its not too late for a career change. Anyone know where I can apply to be a bond vigilante?
so it's kicking the can down the road - all the way down.
Spending money is tool they use to get re-elected. Why would they want to cut off their own nose?
http://www.salon.com/2011/11/1.....committee/
John Stewart on the Super Committee
OPA!
What will it look like when we run out of money? When the interest on the debt outstrips the revenues?
OPA!
http://seattletimes.nwsource.c.....risis.html
Anyone know where I can apply to be a bond vigilante?
I'm a bond vigilante. I'm not buying.
Just remember: the market Fed can remain irrational longer than you can remain solvent.
Can I get some help finding my surprised face? I can't seem to find it anywhere.
Supercongress was always a farce meant to placate the proles for a while. If you thought real cuts would happen, I've got a bridge to sell you.
What do you mean not successful? They have made plenty of money from special interest lobbies.
My only question for this is based on the Bizarro Super Committee image: Does Bizarro Aquaman have a personality?
Yes, and his powers are the best of the bunch.
Instead of swimming in the ocean and talking to fish, he stays on land and yells at fish.
At least in the Super Friends version.
I've said this before, but in the real world--that is, without superheroes or supervillains--his powers are great. If nothing else, a real-world Aquaman could make a mint in commercial fishing.
The real image they need for these stories is from Grant Morrison's Earth 2, where the evil Justice League--The Crime Syndicate of Amerika--sits at a huge table with "Cui Bono" carved into the surface.
I can't find it on the interweb for them, sadly.
Sounds like the Libertarian Overlords on Earth.
Monoclists!
I just want Bizarro Wonder Woman to tie me up and make me lie to her.
That's Negative Wonder Woman. Look it up.
Fool me once, shame on you. Fool me daily......
If there was a majority constituency for defense cuts and/or medicare cuts, then they'd happen eventually. There is no majority consensus for libertarianism. So the farce that is Congress will continue.
Even if they do make some crap ass cuts, net spending will probably still increase and they will undo the cuts later anyway. So its the same thing as nothing. And nothing is the most desirable solution, because it brings things closer to the unavoidable outcome needs to and will happen. My beer chair is pretty much always in my trunk nowadays.
Screw it. Just split the money between the Democrats and Republicans, and let them each spend it on whatever they want. Each party can have 1/435th of the budget for each Congressperson.
Best case scenario: Each Congresshole just pockets its 1/435th share and goes home.
Works for me.
thank you a lotssssssssssssssssss