Monday, December 3, 2012

No Ifs, Thens, or Buts

No Ifs, Thens, or Buts
By Jed Babbin on 12.3.12 @ 6:10AM

Obama is giving Republicans an offer they can refuse.

The Democtrats are already giving us these taxes with Obamacare.

Believe it or not, there was progress in the fiscal cliff negotiations between the White House and congressional Republicans this week. Progress was made, at least in flushing out what both sides really want.

Obama's "offer," taken to the Hill by Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner, was a back-of-the-hand slap at Republicans. Having won the election, Obama chose to make an offer he knew Republicans had to refuse. Starting with $1.6 trillion in increased taxes over the next ten years, Obama asked for more spending -- not spending cuts -- and a potpourri of increased White House power and government growth. Not only did he want unilateral permanent power to raise the debt ceiling, he wanted another "if-then" deal on Social Security, promising an eleven-month study that would supposedly produce an agreement on entitlement reform.

Real progress was made in the reactions to Obama's Christmas wish list. As Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) told the Wall Street Journal about his meeting with Geithner, "He noticed that I laughed. That pretty well summed up my view of what he was saying." House Speaker John Boehner (R-Oh) called the offer "unserious" and said that there was no way the House would give the White House unilateral authority over the debt ceiling. And that was only the beginning.

In a radio interview last week, McConnell told me that the Republicans weren't going to fall for another "if-then" deal, a point he reiterated to the WSJ. If McConnell and Boehner stick to that resolution, and they must, whatever deal may be made will have to be on legislation that takes effect now, not later, when it comes to entitlement reform and spending cuts. Boehner, on Fox News Sunday, explicitly rejected the idea of another commission to study Social Security. He said America has a serious spending problem and "we're going to fix it."

So, at this point, where are we? Nowhere. Which is the good news and the bad news.

It's good news because it will be far better for our economy for no deal to be made before the year ends than if there's another bad deal, like the Budget Control Act of 2011, which created the mess we're in now.

And it's bad news, because Obama and his team have focused the media narrative on one narrow issue: whether the upper income taxpayers will suffer a tax increase. As the narrative goes, that's the only big issue dividing the two sides.

In that radio interview, Sen. McConnell told me that if the upper income rates were raised as Obama wants, the revenue would be so small that it would only pay for six days of the government's operations. The most important issues are twofold, and the Republicans would benefit greatly by undertaking a big media offensive to clarify them.

First and foremost is economic growth. For the economy to recover, for unemployment to drop and for the economy to be able to sustain growth long enough to even begin to make up for what we've lost over the past six years, economic growth has to be spurred.

Obama's plans only increase spending and maintain $1 trillion increases in the federal debt for the foreseeable future. They do nothing to reduce spending or restore growth. And while Republican ideas don't harm growth, they don't focus on producing it.

Thanks to the Free Congress Foundation and prominent economist Gary Robbins, we know what will promote growth. Instead of freezing or increasing tax rates, their "Growth Code" would reduce business taxes, end double taxation, allow expensing (same-year deduction) of the cost of business investment, and provide parity in tax rates for investment and consumption spending. The five points of the "Growth Code" are economically proven, simple, and explainable. They should comprise the simplified agenda Republicans pursue now.

The second issue is federal spending, including Social Security and Medicare. Sen. Dick Durbin (D-Ill) is first among the Dems in insisting that Social Security doesn't add a penny to the federal debt. What nonsense. According to yesterday's Washington Post, Social Security takes in -- at least for now -- more than it spends. But the surplus is borrowed from Social Security's trust funds and spent elsewhere. The borrowing adds to the debt. In 2012 alone, Social Security's income (what's paid into the funds) had $110 billion in interest payments out of a total income of $854 billion.

Yes, we owe it to ourselves, but every penny that is "borrowed" from Social Security trust funds is still part of the debt that has to be repaid.

The rest of the federal budget is as out of control today as it was before the election. The federal debt is now equal to our Gross Domestic Product. The congressional Republicans need to come up with a specific menu of cuts -- massive cuts that take effect now, not ten years from now -- and demand Obama deal with them in whatever deal is made to avoid the fiscal cliff.

Obama's team is out pressing their case. Following Susan Rice's example, Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner made the rounds of the Sunday talk shows yesterday, making Obama's case for higher taxes that congressional Republicans had literally laughed off. His talking points were a bit better than hers, but included one amazing claim.

Geithner's talking points were designed to backfoot the Republicans into negotiating with themselves on spending cuts, and to keep the narrative focused on one question: whether 98% of Americans would have their taxes increased because Republicans refused to raise taxes on "the rich."

Social Security reform, Geithner said, had to be a part of another effort and couldn't be done within the fiscal cliff dealings. He's proposing -- and Durbin is endorsing -- another "if-then" deal. It's hard to believe that the Republicans would fall for that again.

Geithner said that there would be no agreement unless the upper income tax rates are increased. If that's Obama's bottom line, it's a weakness in his position that Republicans can and should exploit.

Geithner also said that Democrats would support Obama's tax hike agenda. But none have come forward to endorse those hikes. Do the so-called moderate Dems -- Sens. Baucus, McCaskill, Pryor, Tester, Landrieu, and Nelson --want the tax hikes? If they do, why haven't they said so? Because small business owners -- including farmers -- reject them. It is those constituencies -- and the whole middle class -- at which the Republicans should focus a media campaign.

There are still four weeks until the fiscal cliff is reached. That's an eternity in politics. As Boehner said, there's a stalemate now. The longer it lasts, the more leverage Republicans will have. Obama is weaker than he appears. Let's take this one to the brink, and not do another "if-then" deal.
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To read another article by Jed Babbin, click here.

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