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Mitch McConnell Debt Ceiling Plan Splits Republican Party

Mitch Mcconnell Debt Ceiling Plan Tea Party

First Posted: 07/19/11 09:14 AM ET Updated: 09/18/11 06:12 AM ET

By Andy Sullivan

WASHINGTON -- Senator Mitch McConnell's plan to avert an imminent U.S. debt default could lead to a day of reckoning for his Republicans as they weigh the prospect of fiscal disaster against the demands of Tea Party activists.

With other efforts to raise the federal government's debt ceiling at a standstill, McConnell's "Plan B" to avoid default is increasingly seen as "Plan A" in Washington.

The proposal by the top Republican in the Senate would dump the task into the laps of President Barack Obama and his Democrats, forcing them to back a $2.4 trillion increase in borrowing before the November 2012 elections as recession-weary voters worry about the country's growing mountain of debt.

Pinning the debt increase on Obama and the Democrats could help McConnell pick up the four seats needed to win Republican control of the Senate and further his stated goal of making Obama a one-term president.

It also may ensure his party avoids getting blamed for an August 2 default that could push the United States back into recession and upend financial markets across the globe.

Surprisingly, Democrats have embraced the plan as the best possible way to get an increase in the debt ceiling through a divided Congress.

Obama could also turn the situation to his advantage.

"Obama's answer (could be) that Republicans in Congress didn't step up and deal with this so I'm making the tough decisions and showing leadership," said Jennifer Duffy, an analyst with the Cook Political Report.

The Democratic-controlled Senate is expected to pass the McConnell measure if it comes up for a vote this week, but prospects are less certain in the Republican-controlled House of Representatives.

The plan would allow Obama to raise the debt ceiling without the deep spending cuts Republicans have sought. Activists from the fiscally and socially conservative Tea Party movement, who helped Republicans win control of the House last year, wonder if they will get another chance.

"It undermines the ideology that led Republicans to win in the first place," said Ryan Hecker of Contract from America, a Tea Party group. "What McConnell is doing is basically giving up."

Such rhetoric carries less weight in the Senate. Tea Party activists arguably prevented Republicans from winning control of that chamber in last year's congressional elections by forcing the party to back inexperienced, erratic candidates over more electable choices in several races.

MR. REPUBLICAN, NOT MR. CONSERVATIVE

McConnell's politics have shifted to the right since he entered politics in the 1960s but his primary concern is his party as an institution, said John David Dyche, a lawyer and McConnell biographer.

"McConnell is a Republican leader more so than a conservative leader," Dyche said.

That is a problem for Tea Party activists who put ideology first.

"He is a typical politician and is living proof of the maxim 'Our nation was designed by geniuses and run by idiots'," said Judson Phillips, founder of Tea Party Nation, one of the movement's biggest groups.

The Tea Party agenda will be front and center this week in Congress.

The House will vote on Tuesday on a plan that would make a debt-ceiling increase conditional on deep spending cuts, firm caps on future spending and congressional passage of a balanced budget amendment to the Constitution.

That bill is expected to fall short in the Senate. The balanced-budget amendment also is likely to fail in the Senate, sparing Republicans a possibly embarrassing vote in the House, where it could also fall short of the two-thirds majority needed for passage.

McConnell has been a strong backer of both bills and calls his plan a backup. But by the end of the week, his proposal could be the only option left.

The measure would avert imminent disaster but do little to solve long-term fiscal problems, one analyst said.

"In terms of a plan addressing the structural deficit problem and the issue of the vibrancy of the U.S. economy and jobs, I don't think it does much of anything," said Ethan Siegal of The Washington Exchange, an analysis firm.

The McConnell plan showcases his mastery of the arcane rules that govern Congress. A complex back-and-forth with the White House would require only one-third of the House and the Senate -- presumably Democrats -- to vote in favor of a debt-ceiling increase.

It would not require any spending cuts to accompany the debt-ceiling increase -- a reversal of the original Republican position. Ironically, Democrats who originally opposed spending cuts are now seeking to attach them to the McConnell plan to gain some political cover.

The plan could force many Senate Democrats to make an awkward choice -- vote against the wishes of their president or vote for an unpopular debt-ceiling increase, Duffy said.

The choice will be harder for House Republicans, whose votes will be needed at the start of the process. House Speaker John Boehner probably would need to cobble together a coalition of moderate Republicans and Democrats to get it passed.

At this point, it is not clear how many votes Boehner can rely on from his side, a Republican aide said, as anything that bears McConnell's name might have trouble passing.

(Additional reporting by Thomas Ferraro and Richard Cowan; Editing by John O'Callaghan)

Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions.

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By Andy Sullivan WASHINGTON -- Senator Mitch McConnell's plan to avert an imminent U.S. debt default could lead to a day of reckoning for his Republicans as they weigh the prospect of fiscal di...
By Andy Sullivan WASHINGTON -- Senator Mitch McConnell's plan to avert an imminent U.S. debt default could lead to a day of reckoning for his Republicans as they weigh the prospect of fiscal di...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
James Bridges
Blue Texan
11:25 AM on 07/21/2011
Can the GOP agree on anything? Doesn't seem like it, except that they all dislike the President.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ScoopLV
Conservatives: ALWAYS on the wrong side of history
11:06 AM on 07/21/2011
To quote Admiral Akbar -- "It's a TRAP!"

If the Democrats fall for this GOP maneuver, they deserve what they get in 2012.
01:37 PM on 07/20/2011
The radical extremist so-called republicans passed a heartless debt plan that goes to the Senate. If the Senate and President Obama sign this ludicrous debt plan, they will have to pay the piper in the 2012 general election.
Those on SS and Medicare, their children and/or grandchildren, their nieces and nephews, those that care about the Seniors, and those that will draw SS and Medicare in the future will vote against any politician up for re-election that voted for this despicable plan.
11:09 AM on 07/20/2011
Keynesian policies worked from the "Great Depression" until Reagan became President and the dismantling of America began by the radical extremist so-called republicans with their narrow minded political and economic ideologies that were never really fact checked, have not worked in the past and will not work in the future.
hank101
do you realy believe all that -----
10:57 AM on 07/20/2011
Mitch & John how is that tea party thingie working for you that you were so proud of last fall.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
TheOneIndependent
09:55 AM on 07/20/2011
Time to vote these traitors out of office. Lets fill the administration with the saner Dems but let us all keep them on their toes. Maybe someday the Republicans will ask for their balls back from Grover, Tea Party and the right wing base. Regardless of party, what we want is representation, true representation. Not get them in and have them follow the right wing march but defend the people that elected them. We need a collaboration of smart ideas from both parties for the best solutions not one party solutions and one party obstructions.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
twin1616
Airborne 1st 325
06:39 AM on 07/20/2011
When we finally get through this Tea Party madness, the country will realize how our divisions can really bring us together. When you have a small group of mindless idiots controlling something so important you are asking for trouble and trouble is just what we got in 2010. We need to pull together and vote those fools out so that WE THE PEOPLE can finally be heard.
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12:22 PM on 07/20/2011
Keep posting, any village missing their idiot will find you...carry your mirror with you, that you may identify yourself.
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forestnfama
Woodstock Veteran
05:45 AM on 07/20/2011
I don't buy this narrative......either way....the republicans are responsible for this mess.......McConnell's slight of hand will not be enough to stop the tea bagger last stand.
Cutting off the nose to despise the face is hardly a good idea to base your arguments on.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ElBruce
05:20 AM on 07/20/2011
Raised ceiling, increased revenue, and no budget cuts? Let's do that.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
LooseCaboose
03:48 AM on 07/20/2011
"He is a typical politician and is living proof of the maxim 'Our nation was designed by geniuses and run by idiots'," said Judson Phillips, founder of Tea Party Nation, one of the movement's biggest groups.
The Foil-Heads are so full of themselves, they wear the igorance like a badge of courage, ready to sink the ship as if it was a heroic act. They STILL don;t realize that they got elected because the voters foolishly stayed home and because they promised attention to jobs. They dangerous loud mouths with all the insight of a tribe of baboons throwing their own doo-doo at others.
McConnell is right about strategy - but so wrong about his anticipated outcome.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Sirlarek
∞-1
02:48 AM on 07/20/2011
Why do the T pots always rip up the bottom of the boat to make oars for paddling?
01:43 AM on 07/20/2011
Day of reckoning for McConnell is when the President pardons that turkey of a senator at Thanksgiving time. gobble gobble.
ClaudiaL
Grover, please proceed...
01:37 AM on 07/20/2011
McConnell should reword his bill to read: All those in favor of raising the debt ceiling say aye if you agree to pledge allegiance to Grover Norquest & the Tea Party; want to see Obama defeated; and want to end all taxation & social programs. Do you think they would vote for that? They seem to believe that the voters won't see through their silly games.
01:26 AM on 07/20/2011
The traditional non-Teaparty Republicans out there must be suffering from one the biggest cases of buyer's remorse in the history of the world. I'll bet that they thought they would have been able to marginalize them by now.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
BillForObama
Hail to the Chief! HAIL, he is the Chief!!!
05:15 AM on 07/20/2011
The non-Teaparty Republicans don't want to marginalize the the ''Baggers. They just want to be able to trot them out when it suits them.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jggrow
01:18 AM on 07/20/2011
In all the talk on austerity, has anyone heard anyone in Congress call for a reduction in costs there? Anyone suggested a pay cut or a reduction in Congress's healthcare costs? How about an overhaul of their retirement program...anyone heard a Congressional action there to reduct long-term debt? I rest my case.
01:22 AM on 07/20/2011
Are you kidding?!