As the Fiscal Cliff draws nigh, Republicans suffer the angst of trying to strike a deal with an intractable President while avoiding either (i) real tax hikes coupled with illusory spending cuts or (ii) blame for the failure to agree. Since the President’s preference is higher taxes plus higher spending, and his default bargaining tactics are assaults on straw men and demonization of opponents, the prospects for a happy outcome for either country or party look dismal. In these bleak circumstances, I have a suggestion: Let Obama be Obama.
Why not announce that Republicans will not block whatever the President proposes, will not filibuster in the Senate and will clear passage in the House, subject to these two conditions?
First, at least 150 House Democrats must vote aye. Speaker Boehner will then see that enough Republican Congressmen abstain so that the bill passes.
Second, the President’s plan must actually reduce the deficit, starting in the current fiscal year rather than in the remote future. My concept is that the GOP would set deficit targets for the next several years: say, $800 billion in FY2013, decreasing by $100 billion in each year thereafter, until a balanced budget is reached. None of the gimmickry of the last Obama budget (the one that was defeated unanimously in both House and Senate), where a purported $4 trillion in “cuts” over ten years led to bigger deficits and a higher national debt at the end. And, needless to say, no reliance on zeroing out the line item for “fraud, waste and abuse”.
Within that framework, it would be up to the President to put forward his ideas. If he can’t or won’t, perhaps it will be obvious to even the obtuse fraternity of American journalists that he has no interest in resolving the country’s long-term fiscal problems. If he does come up with a program, it will be his and his party’s, and they will have undiluted accountability.
The best outcome, of course, would be for Barack Obama to accept the responsibilities of his office and devise rational means to restore national finances to a prosperous equilibrium. He hasn’t shown any talent in that direction, but – let’s not be inveterate pessimists – the challenge could bring out unsuspected abilities.
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