House Republicans just reneged on the debt-ceiling deal, making a default in 2013 almost inevitable.
By Matthew Yglesias | Posted Friday, May 11, 2012, at 3:22 PM ET
Something terrible happened in Congress yesterday—and nobody seemed
to notice. House Republicans voted to take money away from programs
meant to help poor people and give it to the military instead.
That’s not my idea of wise policy, but that’s what was terrible about
it. The problem is that the vote constitutes a collective Republican
welching on the agreement that was reached last spring to raise the
statutory debt ceiling and avoid national default. Yesterday’s vote
doesn’t undo the deal or cause any immediate problems, but by so
speedily backing out of their agreement, the Republicans have done
something much worse—made it impossible for anyone to negotiate with
them in the future, because it’s clear they cannot be trusted to keep
the promises they made.
If President Obama wins re-election, the debt-ceiling issue will have
to be confronted again, but now in a Congress that has been poisoned by
the Republicans’ welching on the last agreement. The country, in other
words, is set for an even more severe version of the crisis that crushed financial markets last summer.
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