This could be a fatal mistake for DemocratsIf the Democrats expect to successfully defend all those seats they won in deep red territory in 2020, there are two ways to go about it:
1- pray that Trump keeps screwing up and that the anti-red wave is even bigger than the 2018 one;2- make a real effort to deliver on the policies the voters want
I happen to believe in the power of prayer. But only God decides which ones get answered and which ones don't-- and when. So... I'd suggest delivering to the voters. And the stuff voters want includes things that can't be delivered on if Pelosi goes ahead with that idiotic PAY-GO plan of hers that virtually no one wants except fro Republicans-- albeit only when Democrats control the House. Just ask David Dayen!Oh, wait! I don't have to publish David's phone number after all! He stuck everything you'd want to ask him into a New Republic piece that came out yesterday, The Left Is Taking Aim at Pelosi’s Deficit Obsession. He sums up the problem that progressives have with her scheme with one line: "The Democratic leader wants to resurrect a House rule that will hinder progressive legislation." And now the explanation, although he prefaced it with some good news: the Congressional Progressive Caucus got Pelosi to agree "to scrap a House rule, implemented by Republicans in 1994, requiring a super-majority vote for raising taxes on the majority of wage-earners, making priorities like Medicare for All or tuition-free college harder to finance." The problem, however, is that there still’s a "major hurdle left to topple: the 'pay as you go' rule, commonly known as PAY-GO, which demands that all new spending get offset with budget cuts or tax increases. Progressive critics argue that this creates an unlevel playing field, where Republicans blow giant holes in the tax code, as they did last year, while Democrats must pay fealty to the deficit. These critics are now mounting a fight to unshackle a future activist government."Raúl Grijalva (D-AZ), the former chair of the Progressive Caucus chair and new chairman of the House Natural Resources Committee agreed that Pelosi's PAY-GO plan "an absurd idea," saying it’s "irresponsible to try to tie up Congress’s ability to respond to economic downturns or, in the current discussion, to slash programs."
Pelosi has defended and expanded pay-go for over a decade. She first instituted it as a standing rule the day she received the speaker’s gavel in 2007, and was a driving force in passing the Statutory Pay-As-You-Go Act in 2010, signed by Barack Obama. That law puts the burden on the president to enforce across-the-board cuts if Congress violates pay-go. The prospect of any president implementing an unpopular hatchet job like that is remote. So the House rule looms large in this fight by constraining new spending at its source.Obviously, Pelosi and her allies on pay-go consider the rule good politics, allowing them to rebut charges about “tax and spend” liberals by insisting that every new program is fully paid for. If anybody actually cared about the deficit, instead of habitually using it as a weapon to rein in the opposition party, maybe that logic would be compelling. But even if the politics make sense, the rule leads to bad policy, as Josh Bivens of the Economic Policy Institute, which is quite close to House progressives, argues in a paper last week.As Bivens explains, the Affordable Care Act’s subsidies were artificially made smaller because of pay-go rules. Democrats also created a long implementation period for Obamacare, with four years between signing and the effective date of the exchanges. That allowed adherence to pay-go within the ten-year budget window. But it also denied benefits to the public for an exceedingly long period, during which Republicans swept into virtually all levels of government.A pay-go rule is even more dangerous in a time of economic downturn, when government needs to be the spender of last resort. “It is terrible economics to view federal budget deficits as always and everywhere bad,” Bivens writes, and that’s especially true when the economy is struggling. Democrats, he notes, were obsessed with President George W. Bush “running up the nation’s credit card” on wars and tax cuts when the real focus should have been on deregulation that was weakening financial markets.When the Great Recession hit, the stimulus package was deliberately targeted lower than what was required to fix the economy. In 2010, Obama pivoted toward deficit reduction, and fiscal policy started to go negative in the middle of that year, while Democrats still controlled Congress and unemployment was still unforgivably high. Public sector jobs fell every year from 2009 to 2011. Bivens highlights a remarkable stat: “If this public spending following the Great Recession had followed the average path of the recoveries of the 1980s, 1990s, and early 2000s, a full recovery with unemployment around 4 percent would have been achieved by 2013.”Pay-go can always be waived-- as it was for the stimulus, and for the Republican tax cuts. But it creates an environment where legislation must be mindful of deficits first and helping people second. Bivens’s paper and other unconventional economic thinkers like Stephanie Kelton have taken their mission as re-educating Capitol Hill that the goals of fiscal policy must be broader than the budget deficit.The Trump tax cuts actually provide a wide range of “pay-fors” that could be used to fulfill pay-go-- just reverse the gifts to corporations and the wealthy to pay for programs. But it still puts Democrats in a box, having to propose tax increases up front, which Republicans gleefully broadcast. Republicans get to play Santa Claus, able to promise endless tax cuts and endless spending, while Democrats pray that voters see them as the party of fiscal responsibility.