For Mike Johnson it was effectively a Day 1 priority.

It’s well past time, the newly elected House speaker said in October, to establish a bipartisan commission to tackle the federal government’s growing $34.6 trillion in debt. “The consequences if we don’t act now are unbearable,” he said, echoing warnings from his predecessor and other House Republicans.

More than six months later, the proposal appears all but dead, extinguished by vocal opposition from both the right and the left.

The collapse underscores an unyielding dynamic in Washington, with lawmakers in both parties loath to consider the unpopular tradeoffs that would be necessary to stem the nation’s swelling tide of red ink — particularly in an election year. Facing the reality that any fiscal commission would almost certainly suggest that Americans pay more or get less from their government, lawmakers have time and again done what they do so well: punt the problem to the next Congress. And they seem poised to do so again.

  • @njm1314
    link
    05 months ago

    Disagree completely. Trump conservatives are just your normal conservatives who aren’t afraid to say things out loud anymore.

    • @disguy_ovahea
      link
      15 months ago

      They’d have to demonstrate fiscal responsibility to be accurately labeled as conservatives.

      • @njm1314
        link
        05 months ago

        No they don’t. That’s always been a lie they tell.