AUTHOR
Nasty partisan rhetoric on both sides masked slow progress toward an agreement. Howard Kurtz on what really happened behind the scenes.
After months of savaging each other as the country moved perilously close to defaulting on its debt, Democrats and Republicans are now moving toward a deal that would slash spending between $2 trillion and $4 trillion, raise taxes and stave off disaster.
How did that happen, exactly?
The answer is that while feeding red-meat rhetoric to their ideological bases, President Obama and the GOP reluctantly embraced the politics of adulthood behind the scenes, recognizing that they would pay a huge price—and shatter the fragile economic recovery--by failing to boost the debt ceiling by the Aug. 2 deadline.
No one on the political stage wanted to be seen as going wobbly, but in the end they need a mutual-survival pact. So they’ve carried out a rendition of Kabuki theater, where what one saw on the outside didn’t always reflect what was going on behind closed doors.
Take House Majority Leader Eric Cantor, who kicked up a classic Beltway fuss in late June by walking out on Joe Biden’s negotiations to move the country back from the brink of default. But Cantor has since quietly held a series of back-channel conversations with the vice president.
Republicans have loudly proclaimed they won’t budge on even minor tax increases, citing fears they’d hurt the economic recovery. But some are more worried about being targeted for defeat by anti-tax crusader Grover Norquist and have been searching for semantic detours around his no-new-taxes pledge, which many of them signed.
And while Obama’s party has spent months accusing the GOP of trying to gut Medicare, a Democratic congressman offered a plan behind closed doors to slice $480 billion from federal health programs—if Republicans would swallow some tax hikes in the process.
Politicians have always postured in public and played poker in private, but as both sides dithered over the debt ceiling, even grizzled veterans grew disgusted. “My side’s just as guilty. I think we’re going to have a crisis because politics is going to trump the good of the country,” says Republican Sen. Tom Coburn. “It doesn’t sound like there are any real adults any more, including in the White House.”
This time may be different as Americans, beaten down by a painful recession, are hungering for leaders who can rise above the media frenzies about financial Armageddon and get them on a common-sense road to recovery.
Even as each party stubbornly stuck to its talking points, strong signs of compromise emerged this week -- raising hopes for a $2 trillion-to-$4 trillion deficit-cutting package that would spread the pain around.
Much work still needs to be done, and the cautiously good feelings that emerged from a bargaining session Thursday at the White House could dissipate anew into partisan bickering. The next big moment comes Sunday when the two sides return to the bargaining table, hoping to settle on an exact size of spending cuts.
Bill Clinton and Newt Gingrich once managed to close down the government back in the mid-1990s, but they eventually suspended their sniping and passed a balanced budget. But that was in an era before Web warfare. It is a measure of how far the debate has shifted—and of America’s $14-trillion debt--that lawmakers are at last talking about killing such once-sacred cows as agriculture payments and oil industry tax breaks.
Coburn tried early on to abolish the ethanol subsidies treasured by corn farmers, prompting a heated debate among Republicans about what constitutes a tax.
Norquist, who heads Americans for Tax Reform, accused Coburn of wanting to “trick Republicans into voting for a teeny tax increase” that would shatter the sacred pledge. Coburn says the activist is playing “the typical Washington game of gotcha.” But on Thursday week a bipartisan group of senators struck a symbolic compromise to slash the ethanol payments.
While talking tough in public, Cantor has embraced the narrow escape hatch in Norquist’s pledge, that tax loopholes can be closed if they are offset by tax reductions elsewhere. The exchange is classic Kabuki theater – it doesn’t reduce the deficit by a dime, but it could give Obama political cover for the Medicare cuts that his liberal allies, led by House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, are already denouncing.
“No one on the political stage wanted to be seen as going wobbly, but in the end they needed a mutual-survival pact. So they carried out a rendition of Kabuki theater, where what one saw on the outside didn’t always reflect what was going on behind closed doors.”
“No one on the political stage wanted to be seen as going wobbly, but in the end they needed a mutual-survival pact. So they carried out a rendition of Kabuki theater, where what one saw on the outside didn’t always reflect what was going on behind closed doors.”
An earlier façade of Democratic unity masks the degree to which lawmakers have been chafing at the president’s perceived passivity. Pelosi and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid have privately urged Obama to be more confrontational. “I’d pick a lot more fights than he has,” Reid tells Newsweek.
Obama was “chomping at the bit” to punch back, a top White House official insists, but didn’t want to “blow up” the Biden talks. After they collapsed, senior aides David Plouffe and Dan Pfeiffer offered a blueprint for Obama to accuse the Republicans of protecting tax breaks for millionaires, corporate jet owners and hedge-fund managers — all time-honored populist targets. But soon after Obama delivered the indictment, he was floating new spending concessions in a secret meeting with House Speaker John Boehner—two grownups quietly seeking common ground.
Cantor was furious when Obama targeted such tax breaks as the one for corporate jets owners, which costs $3 billion over 10 years. “That’s not leadership,” Cantor says. “To insinuate that $3 billion in corporate loopholes is causing the impasse when it’s trillions of dollars, I think that’s disingenuous at best.” Pfeiffer sees an “element of absurdity” to the GOP’s carping about class warfare.
The talks imploded last month when Chris Van Hollen, a top Pelosi lieutenant to Pelosi, produced a one-page “menu” that amped up the Democrats’ tax demands in ways that even some on his side felt were unrealistic. What’s more, Van Hollen said, if the Republicans wouldn’t give ground on taxes, the Medicare and Medicaid cutbacks were off the table too. For good measure, he proposed cutting the value of income tax deductions for individuals earning more than $500,000.
After the session, Cantor pulled Biden aside for a 20-minute chat. “Something has changed,” he insisted. Biden downplayed the shift and urged him to look at the “big picture.”
At 9:40 the next morning, while Biden was meeting on Afghanistan, Cantor called to say he was pulling out. Cantor had only informed Boehner just 40 minutes earlier—this after the speaker had privately met with Obama the night before.
Cantor, who aspires to be the first Jewish speaker, appeared to be distancing himself from his leader. The Virginian’s bold, on-message approach contrasts sharply with Boehner’s diffident style —mirroring a split between the GOP’s Tea Party wing and its more establishment leadership and stirring talk of a possible coup.
Cantor, who wants a smaller debt deal than Boehner, tells Newsweek that reports of a rift are the product of a “hyperbolic press machine in Washington” and that his hard line simply reflects a GOP consensus: “We don’t think you can raise taxes in a sick economy.”
Publicly, the air is thick with accusations of bad faith. Democratic Sen. Chuck Schumer says Republicans may want “to see the economy in worse shape so they’ll benefit politically,” while Coburn says the Democrats want to “blow up” the process “and use the power of the White House to scare seniors.”
But away from the cameras, even sharp-tongued politicians recognize the imperative of avoiding the fate of Greece. It is a sign of the times that the Kabuki players of Washington may take a bow simply for averting catastrophe.
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