You have commented 339 times on Rantburg.

Your Name
Your e-mail (optional)
Website (optional)
My Original Nic        Pic-a-Nic        Sorry. Comments have been closed on this article.
Bold Italic Underline Strike Bullet Blockquote Small Big Link Squish Foto Photo
Home Front: Politix
Obama warning over US debt deadlock
2011-07-01
[Al Jazeera] Barack B.O. Obama, the US president, has told Republicans they must accept tax increases for wealthy Americans in a deal to head off the risk of a debt default that would deal a "significant" blow to the economy.

Obama on Wednesday dismissed criticism that his own leadership was lacking, in a showdown over raising the government's $14.29tn borrowing authority ahead of an August 2 deadline.

Republicans have been demanding heavy spending cuts to narrow a $1tn budget deficit.

The president said his Democrats had accepted tough and painful spending cuts but lashed out at Republicans who he said were blocking his spending on education and health care to save tax breaks for oil firms and corporate jet owners.

"I don't think that's real radical. I think the majority of Americans agree with that," Obama said, speaking at a White House presser.

Republicans last week walked out of talks with the administration, claiming Obama was bent on raising taxes.

But Obama warned that should a deal not get done soon, the US faced the real prospect of defaulting on its debts at a time when it is already struggling to fire up a sluggish recovery and create jobs.

"If the United States government for the first time cannot pay its bills, if it defaults, then the consequences for the US economy will be significant and unpredictable and that is not a good thing," Obama said.

Obama said he did not want to "spook" people, but he warned that no one knew how capital markets and investors in the US economy would react if no deal was reached; he said the economic headwinds facing America would only get worse.

Debt showdown
"These are bills that Congress ran up. The money's been spent," Obama said, comparing politicians to a family that had bought a car or a house and was refusing to pay its bills.

"We are the greatest nation on Earth and we can't act that way. This is urgent and needs to get settled."

The comments came as the debt showdown gets caught up in Obama's campaign for a second White House term and Republican efforts to thwart him.

Opinion polls have found that the US public broadly backs raising taxes on the wealthiest Americans as part of a comprehensive agreement to reduce the soaring deficit and rein in galloping debt.

Obama, who has now taken charge of negotiations with Republicans, has predicted that a deal will emerge eventually.

But this time, congressional Republicans elected in a backlash against government and on a platform of sweeping spending cuts in last November's mid-term polls, are demanding big concessions from the White House.

Republican leaders reacted with disdain to Obama's presser.

"The president's remarks today ignore legislative and economic reality," John It is not pronounced 'Boner!' Boehner,
... the occasionally weepy leader of House Republicans...
the speaker for the House of Representatives, said.

"The president is sorely mistaken if he believes a bill to raise the debt ceiling and raise taxes would pass the House. The votes simply aren't there - and they aren't going to be there," he said.
Posted by:Fred

#12  Presently, we're just looking at a technical default - like paying your credit card bill a few days late. Interest payments are far below revenues, so kicking the can down the road works for now. When it doesn't anymore, TRUE default will piss off our foreign creditors far beyond any of their posturing over that cowboy Boosh.

Frankly, I kinda like the idea. In his usual flip tones, B.O. could just shrug, "if I owe you $100, I have a problem. If I owe you a million dollars, you have a problem. See ya." Although that might put a dent in campaign donations from abroad.

Unfortunately paying congressmen is a constitutional mandate.
Yeah, but it doesn't say how much. $1 a year till we're back in the black seems like a good place to start.
Posted by: RandomJD   2011-07-01 21:09  

#11  The pundits all seem to take it for granted there isn't enough government income to maintain the current national debt...

Maybe not at the current level of spending.
Posted by: Ebbang Uluque6305   2011-07-01 16:06  

#10  Link to great Economist article on America's Debt Ceiling. Warning: can get 'heavy' at times, but worth the read.
http://www.economist.com/node/18866851

Posted by: Blossom Forkbeard2446   2011-07-01 15:50  

#9  shared sacrifice

In olden times, when things would go badly, they'd try to propitiate the Gods by sacrificing the Royal family.
Posted by: g(r)omgoru   2011-07-01 15:33  

#8  "shared sacrifice" means he plays golf and goes to Marthas Vinyard and you pay for it.
Posted by: newc   2011-07-01 15:00  

#7  I've been wondering the same thing about default. If borrowing ever increasing amounts is the problem, and defaulting makes it harder to borrow, it might hurt our pride but it sounds like a step in the right direction.

Certainly better to fix our own house though.
Posted by: rjschwarz   2011-07-01 14:45  

#6  ...except default also is the result of the Donk plan anyways. It just kicks it down the road with even greater ruin when it hits.
Posted by: Procopius2k   2011-07-01 13:50  

#5  Zero's been patient for several weeks now. it's time to let him have his way.

I'm just afraid default is his way. He thinks he can blame it on the Pubs.
Posted by: Bobby   2011-07-01 12:09  

#4  Since there will be no more borrowing, find funds to service debt by reducing entitlement spending immediately I haven't found the figures that say that would be enough. The pundits all seem to take it for granted there isn't enough government income to maintain the current national debt, which I very much doubt. I would like to see the figures. Certainly some departments could have their funding terminated totally & the country would be better off for it, e.g., Dept. of Education. Unfortunately paying congressmen is a constitutional mandate. Obama is intransigent & would rather have the US default than let up on his agenda. Maybe default IS his agenda. Zero has shown zero intention of cutting his pet spending projects.
Posted by: Anguper Hupomosing9418   2011-07-01 11:59  

#3  Had a long conversation with my pop about this last night. Call me on our logic:
1. Keep debt ceiling as it is today
2. Since there will be no more borrowing, find funds to service debt by reducing entitlement spending immediately (thus avoiding default and retaining AAA credit rating)
3. When populace bitches about shrinking feed trough, have the entitlements insolvency discussion that everyone's avoided for decades.

Besides, I'm not so sure that default would be a bad thing anyway. Busting us down to a 'B' rating would be a good (albeit painful) wake-up call for alot of people and force this country to confront a bunch of demons. We *are* a frickin credit risk.

Posted by: Blossom Forkbeard2446   2011-07-01 11:20  

#2  Has anyone considered that a failure to raise the debt limit is an instant balancing of the budget?
Posted by: Anguper Hupomosing9418   2011-07-01 01:36  

#1  Republicans have been demanding heavy spending cuts to narrow a $1tn budget deficit.

The federal government under Obama is spending about $1 trillion more than in 2008. Coincidence?
Posted by: Eohippus Phater7165   2011-07-01 01:16  

00:00