Not long ago, President Barack Obama ordered the creation of a
commission that would report back to him with policy recommendations on
cutting the federal deficit.
And as great leaders throughout history have proved, the most
effective way to tend to any intergenerational crisis is to create a
bipartisan commission to study it -- but only after midterm elections.
You, the public, are only asked to suspend your disbelief and accept
that the president is deeply worried about the deficit, the huge
national debt and the federal spending explosion. As a candidate, after
all, the president assured us that he would scour the budget "line by
line" for any wasteful spending, yet today we've seen the national debt
climb to $13 trillion, and federal spending is nearly 25 percent of
gross domestic product. Washington likely will spend $1.56 trillion more
than it took in last year -- putting the Bush administration to shame.
At the G-20 summit, in fact, for the first time in history, the U.S.
president is the one advocating that other nations hasten their
bankruptcy agendas, increase government debt and strengthen control
economies by offering more "stimulus."
Hasn't the president heard? His own administration doesn't have the
nerve to refer to the trillion-dollar government/union boondoggle as a
"stimulus" anymore. Today the preferred White House parlance is
"emergency" bill.
Yet the audacity of hope dictates that the president turn the tables
on his critics and start kicking some serious tea party butt. That's why
we heard this from him: "Next year, when I start presenting some very
difficult choices to the country, I hope some of these folks who are
hollering about deficits and debt start stepping up, because I'm calling
their bluff."
Now, by "difficult choices," rest assured we're talking about a
bundle of tax increases -- because no one in Washington right now will
significantly cut spending. Democrats claim that nothing can be taken
off the table in the budget fix. Which is good to know when the
discussion turns to capital gains cuts, corporate tax cuts or slashing
entitlement programs and subsidies for those morally sound industries
the left loves.
Republicans, on the other hand, face a political dilemma, as well.
They are bluffing. Cutting funding for the National Endowment for the
Arts? The Department of Education? Senate salaries? Is that going to do
the trick? If the Republicans want to be credible on the issue, they
must do more than reverse Obamacare, which is improbable in the short
term, anyway.
A recent Pew Research poll found that 23 percent -- a growing number
-- of Americans believe that the federal budget deficit is the top
concern facing the nation. If the opposition party -- needing redemption
on this issue -- can't offer a coherent, viable long-term strategy to
undo the damage done by reckless spending, it is going to be doomed to
remain in the minority for a long time.
Reach columnist David Harsanyi at dharsanyi@denverpost.com.