Ron DeSantis and Chris Christie Call Out Trump for Adding to Federal Debt
"He owes it to you to defend his record where they added $7.8 trillion to the debt that set the stage for the inflation that we have."

At the first Republican presidential primary debate last month, former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley stood out for quickly calling out former President Donald Trump for adding nearly $8 trillion to the national debt during his four years in office.
A few of her competitors for the nomination took notice.
Within the first 10 minutes of Wednesday's second GOP debate, both former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie and current Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis pointedly criticized Trump for adding to the national debt—and for declining to show up Wednesday to defend his record.
In response to a question about whom voters ought to blame in the event of a government shutdown, Christie said everyone in D.C. for the past few years deserves scorn.
"And let's be honest about this with the voters: During the Trump administration they added $7 trillion in national debt. And now the Biden administration has put another $5 trillion and counting," Christie said. "None of them are willing to take on the difficult issues. They just want to keep kicking the can down the road."
Moments later, DeSantis jumped in to make the same point.
"Donald Trump is missing in action. He should be on this stage tonight. He owes it to you to defend his record where they added $7.8 trillion to the debt that set the stage for the inflation that we have," DeSantis said. "As your president, when they send me a bloating [sic] spending bill that's going to cause your prices to go up, I'm going to take out this veto pen, and I'm going to send it right back to them."
It seems obvious that both candidates noticed how Haley got a significant bump in the polls following her strong performance in the first debate and decided to borrow from her highlight reel.
It's a clean hit on Trump, the GOP frontrunner. During Trump's four years in office, the national debt climbed from about $20 trillion to nearly $28 trillion. Today, it stands at $33.1 trillion—incredibly, that's roughly $400 billion higher than it was during the first Republican debate held just 35 days ago.
The bills racked up by Biden and Trump (and former Presidents Barack Obama and George W. Bush, for that matter) are now coming due. Much of that borrowing occurred when interest rates were significantly lower than they are today, but rising interest rates have compounded the annual payments on the debt. According to the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget, interest costs will exceed military spending within the next two years, under current interest rates, and will become "the single largest government program in just two decades."
That looming crisis perhaps explains the increasing willingness of the Republican field to call out Trump's record—and the record of Republican lawmakers in Congress, most of whom voted for those spending increases and the borrowing they require. It's a significant development, if only because talking about the threat that reckless federal borrowing poses to the country is a necessary first step toward getting the deficit under control.
Of course, we should not be naive enough to confuse campaign trail talk—to say nothing of debate stage bluster—for an actual commitment to dealing with the debt. And, as it was for Haley a month ago, this is a convenient way for candidates like DeSantis and Christie to draw a distinction between themselves and their rivals who have played a role in passing recent federal budgets.
The Republican Party has a lot of work to do to reclaim its place as the party of fiscal responsibility. But if the GOP's would-be leaders keep talking like this, it might eventually get there.
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Out of curiosity, has Reason covered the money transfer from China to Joe Biden's house?
Deflect much
What does Joe Biden's house spend money on? New carpeting and drapes? Does it have it's own bank account, or does his house only accept bitcoin?
A little late for that. Where we they when Trump jacked spending up to 6 trillion, so Biden could use it as the new baseline?
It was all the dems fault, everything is...
Where were you when Trump jacked up spending by $7.8 trillion? Gazing lovingly at your "Trump as Jesus" poster?
Yes. One of Trumps biggest mistakes was signing that curs-id Democrat pitched/pushed Cares Act ($5T-Alone). Biden already got that beat though at $5.4T.
He also pushed for a massive infrastructure bill and didn't veto any spending bills (that I know of.)
It's fine to criticize the spending during his administration. My issue is that I know Boehm's problem is with the man and his party, not the spending. He just yesterday was making an argument in favor of government welfare because Republicans put that forward as one place to cut spending.
LOL YOU have TDS. Sick cultist seek help.
Difference being pointing out a mistake versus being an actual TDS cultivist … name-calling mentality entirely for the sake of being a bully and building gang-affiliation-division. The #1 trait and very platform the left lives on. Who the [WE]-mob-RULES cult consists of versus those 'icky' ones.
Are they calling Hayley/DeSantis a RINO yet?
"Ron DeSantis and Chris Christie Call Out Trump for Adding to Federal Debt"
Um...Congress controls the purse. Congress is responsible for all the debt.
But ok, look at what this hand is doing.
I was thinking the same thing. The headline should read, "Two hypocrits call out Trump for being a hypocrit." It's as bad as this story where a New York judge agreed that Trump is guilty of lying to banks and insurance people....
Who doesn't lie to banks and insurance companies? Another headline that should read "Trump guilty of doing what everyone else does every day."
We get it. You hate Trump. Move on please.