Future of the GOP

Opinion Brief

John Boehner's new debt-ceiling threat: Will it blow up in his face?

Congress won't have to vote to raise the U.S. debt ceiling again until December. Thanks to the House speaker, the politicking has already begun

House Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio) says he sees the debt ceiling as an "action-forcing event," where he will insist on cuts greater than the ceiling increase.

House Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio) says he sees the debt ceiling as an "action-forcing event," where he will insist on cuts greater than the ceiling increase. Photo: AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite SEE ALL 70 PHOTOS

Best Opinion:  Daily Kos, Wash. Post, Firedoglake

It's been a few months since we've had a budget standoff between House Republicans and President Obama, thanks to a deal ironed out during the last epic fight in August, when a last-minute agreement was made to raise the national debt ceiling. That compromise raised the ceiling high enough to get the nation through the 2012 elections, though probably not much further. With last summer's damaging brinkmanship in mind, Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner said Tuesday that he expects Congress to act "without drama, pain, and damage" in December. House Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio) says no, he will insist, like last round, on "cuts and reforms greater than the debt limit increase," or else. Will the threat of a postelection debt default strengthen Boehner's hand in negotiations, or blow up in his face?

Boehner is playing with fire, and a weak hand: Whether this is "an electoral death wish or a leadership Hail Mary," Boehner apparently has a short memory, says Joan McCarter at Daily Kos. The last time he and his House Republicans held America's creditworthiness hostage over "draconian cuts," it didn't do them "one bit of good outside the extreme, Tea Party base." The fact that Boehner is willing to threaten the U.S. economy again, before the election, suggests he's desperately trying to stave off a coup from the Tea Party faction in his own caucus.
"John Boehner: Bring on the next debt ceiling hostage crisis"

Obama is the one who should be worried: Boehner's election-season hardball over the debt ceiling will just "remind voters how derelict the president has been" on fiscal matters, says Jennifer Rubin at The Washington Post. That's the point, and Boehner's being joined in this "Obama didn't do his job" message by Mitt Romney. The GOP is relishing this fight; Obama isn't. 
"Boehner: Watch out for that fiscal cliff"

The real loser here is the economy, and us: We won't know how this lame-duck fight goes down until after the election, says David Dayen at Firedoglake. If Romney wins, expect the GOP to suddenly have no problem raising the debt ceiling, for example. But "leaving politics aside for a moment, this is a looming disaster for the economy." If we have a repeat of last year's near-default and then budget-slashing deal, expect another "downgrade of the United States' credit rating and a significant weakening of economic performance."
"Boehner plans to set economy on fire again..."

 
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opinion brief

Paul Ryan's budget: An albatross for the GOP?

The spending plan puts Republicans on record as favoring massive spending cuts and a Medicare overhaul. How will that go over with voters?

House Republicans overwhelmingly passed Paul Ryan's Medicare-transforming budget on Thursday, and critics say it may come back to haunt them come November.

House Republicans passed Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan's budget on Thursday — without a single Democratic vote. The spending plan has no chance of getting approved by the Democratic-controlled Senate and signed into law by President Obama, but it puts... More

opinion brief

The GOP's plummeting Latino support: Blame Mitt Romney?

The GOP hopes to chip away at the massive advantage President Obama had with Latino voters in 2008 — but so far, it hasn't worked out that way

Mitt Romney campaigns in Arizona: The GOP presidential frontrunner has suggested that the Grand Canyon State's controversial immigration law should become a national model.

Even though President Obama dominated the Latino vote in 2008, walloping John McCain 67 percent to 31 percent, this year's crop of Republicans aren't deterred, and have long hoped to make gains with Latinos, especially as Obama is plagued by his tough... More

opinion brief

Andrew Breitbart's death: The 'astonishing' liberal gloating

While conservatives grieve over the loss of a liberal bête noire, some on the Left engage in a little grave-dancing. Would Breitbart actually approve?

The late Andrew Breitbart didn't always show respect for the dead: In the wake of Sen. Ted Kennedy's (D-Mass) death in 2009, Breitbart called the liberal lion a "villain," a "duplicitous bastard," and a "prick."

Conservatives spent much of Thursday mourning the sudden death of flame-throwing internet pioneer Andrew Breitbart — and fuming over the "astonishing outpouring of hate toward Breitbart from the Left." Among the "mean-spirited" blog posts and tweets... More

opinion brief

Does the GOP want $5 gas?

As rising gas prices sour the national mood, Obama accuses Republicans of hoping for more bad economic news so they can use it against him in November

Skyrocketing gas prices in 2008: Some say the cost of fuel, which is climbing once again, could reach $5 per gallon in many parts of the country this summer.

There are no "quick fixes" for rising gasoline prices, President Obama said Thursday, trying to get in front of an issue that threatens to compromise his re-election campaign. Republicans are blaming Obama for the uptick — which could reach $5 per gallon... More

opinion brief

Payroll tax fight: Has Boehner lost control of the GOP?

The House speaker rejects the Senate's bipartisan tax deal after members of his caucus revolt. Just who's calling the shots in the House?

House Speaker John Boehner's caucus rejected the Senate's two-month extension of the payroll tax break: Without congressional action, taxes on working Americans will climb two percentage points on Jan. 1.

Republican John Boehner is ending his first year as House speaker with a high-stakes political gamble: On Tuesday, his caucus rejected a Senate bill to extend a popular payroll tax break for two months. Instead, House Republicans insisted that the recessed... More

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