GOP Should Take a Stand on Debt Ceiling

According to reports, House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan has been urging his colleagues to back off on the budget fight and focus on a debt ceiling showdown. In exchange for an increase in the legal limit on federal government borrowing, Ryan believes that the GOP can demand a series of items, starting with a delay of Obamacare, the construction of the Keystone XL pipeline and other spending reforms.

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It’s still doubtful Republicans will be able to extract any meaningful concessions on Obamacare, but the president’s “I will not negotiate” over the debt ceiling position is undermined by the inconvenient fact that he already did, in 2011. And at the very least, depicting conservative opponents as crazed nihilists becomes slightly more precarious for Democrats because of public opinion.

An NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll released last week finds that 44 percent of respondents are against raising the debt ceiling and that only 22 percent believe it should be raised so the U.S. avoids “going into bankruptcy and defaulting on its obligations.” A third of those who answered are unsure.

A Reason-Rupe poll finds that 55 percent of Americans say they do not support raising the debt ceiling even if it causes the U.S. to default. With dollar-to-dollar spending cuts, 45 percent say they’d support raising it, and 46 percent would still oppose.

ABC News has a poll out that finds voters nearly split on the debt ceiling, with 46 percent saying raise it and 43 percent saying no. Among independents, 48 percent support raising it, and 46 percent oppose raising it.

Certainly, there is some truth to the notion that Americans don’t bother with specifics. In this case, pollsters have gone out of their way to make sure those polled understand the consequences of their answer. The NBC poll’s question explained that the U.S. must pass it “to avoid going into bankruptcy and defaulting on its obligations”; that seems to be a fair way to characterize the outcome, even if some of us may quibble a bit. In the ABC poll, respondents even verify that they would be willing to risk hurting the economy in the short term for long-term sanity on debt.

If pollsters only polled economic issues that everyone fully understood, they’d be out of work quickly. As Barack Obama knows well, in politics it doesn’t matter whether voters comprehend the intricacies of the bond market or default (or private equity and venture capital firms or creative destruction, for that matter); it only matters that they think they do.

Moreover, the supposed consequences aren’t so important as many in the media would have you think. When congressional liberals opposed additional funding for Iraq, no one was under the impression that troops were going to have to hitchhike home from Fallujah. You may believe failing to hike the debt ceiling would be “calamitous” for everyone — as one GOP aide told National Review — but no one seriously expects a calamity. The only question is: What will be the parameters moving forward? That’s hardly an unprecedented political position or as destructive as the left-wing punditry would have voters believe.

In general, voters like the idea of embedded limits on government spending. So it’s no surprise that hiking debt limits perfunctorily, every single time we hit them (and without extraordinary measures, we would have been there in May), isn’t an especially popular position. What’s so crazy about a dollar-for-dollar match in spending moving forward? What’s so crazy about delaying an expensive and unpopular program for a year? Do Dems believe in any limits on future debt? Whatever questions the GOP comes up with, they’ll be more productive than defending a shutdown. It’s still not ideal, of course. But it’s better than many of the alternatives.

David Harsanyi is a senior editor at The Federalist. Follow him on Twitter @davidharsanyi.

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