kenberg, on 2023-May-19, 20:34, said:
Biden could, if he thought my suggestion practical, suggest that after, and if, we get through the current trauma without default we then immediately set a cumulative debt limit [/size]through May 31, 2024 that we would seriously try to stay within. He will not be doing this.
As nice as that idea may sound, unless Biden invokes the 14th Amendment as more and more Democrats are suggesting, that's not how things work in Congress. Under the current law,
it's up to Congress to pass a bill raising the debt ceiling and the president to sign the bill. On his own, Biden can say anything like you suggest, but it means absolutely nothing to Congress, and Congress would still have to pass a debt ceiling bill that matches what Biden proposed (again, assuming the 14th Amendment isn't invoked which would undoubtedly be appealed to the Supreme Court).
kenberg, on 2023-May-19, 20:34, said:
Right now the Rs like to use the debt limit to jerk us around. That's true. But what is also true is that the Ds like the debt limit to be discussed after the money has been spent so they can say "Hey, the money is spent, we have to adjust the limit to cover it". The result is that the debt limit is a total fake. Except that sooner or later this gameplaying is going to bite us where it hurts. That's usually what happens when everyone pays lip service to something, say a debt limit, when that something does not really exist in any meaningful sense.
The Democrats say "Hey, the money is spent, we have to adjust the limit to cover it" because that's absolutely true. And when there is a QOP president, that's what the QOP also says. It's only lately when there's a Democratic president that the QOP gets religion about holding down the debt and performs a publicity stunt threatening to shut down the government by refusing to raise the debt ceiling unless they get their way.
Once again, the time to discuss the budget is after the president submits a budget to Congress, and Congress debates and passes an appropriations bill which is then sent to the White House for the president to sign or veto. There's a reason that time of year is called budget negotiations. And no matter who is president and who is in control of Congress, nobody wants to cut spending or increase taxes enough to put a serious dent in reducing the gap between income and spending, so the deficit continues to increase.
And sometimes unexpected things happen, like the Covid pandemic where the US spent almost $6
trillion in relief efforts, with nearly a year and a half of serious business slowdowns and shutdowns that put a dent in taxable income. And there are natural disasters like earthquakes, fires, floods, hurricanes, tornadoes, as well as wars (e.g. Russia's unprovoked invasion of Ukraine) that cost hundreds of billions.
Instead of railing against a raising the debt ceiling bill which I and many others agree is a silly remnant from another time, do you have any suggestions on how to actually begin to decrease the debt?