This blog often looks at the GOP/Tea Party's desire to slash and burn government - and most importantly the social safety net - with little regard for the lives damaged. With another fiscal confrontation in the offing, some are saying that Wall Street may be fooling itself if it doesn't take the insanity of the GOP House seriously and prepare for potential calamity. A piece in
Politico looks at the damage the GOP might weak on America. Here are highlights:
Talk to anyone on Wall Street and they will tell you they really
don’t care about the brewing fiscal storm in Washington. Possible
government shutdown? Whatever. Debt ceiling crisis? Meh.
The
prevailing view: When Congress returns in September, sabers will be
rattled and threats will be hurled. But then, as usual, Washington will
grind out a crummy deal that keeps the federal lights on and avoids a
disastrous default.
But this time — wait for it — could be different. Really, seriously different.
Here is just a sampling of why Wall Street may be wrong: The House
GOP is hopelessly fractured on spending strategy. Senate Republicans who
might otherwise broker a deal face primary challenges that make
compromise potentially deadly. Other Senate Republicans are jockeying
for 2016. And congressional Democrats have no appetite for any bargain —
grand or otherwise — that cuts entitlement spending.
And it is not just a government shutdown or debt-ceiling crisis that could cause a Beltway shakeup of markets this fall.
There is also the possibility of a nasty confirmation fight for the
next chairman of the Federal Reserve just as the central bank starts to
wind down its program of buying hundreds of billions in bonds to support
the economy.
Wrap all this potential dysfunction together and there is a real
chance that the fall of 2013 will be more like the summer of 2011, when a
near-miss on the debt ceiling led to a ratings agency downgrade, a huge
sell-off in the stock market and yet another hit to an economy that
might otherwise be heating up nicely.
Leadership in both parties seem to want a continuing resolution in
September that would fund the government through the end of the year.
They may get it. But it’s not obvious how.
GOP Sens. Marco Rubio of Florida and Ted Cruz of Texas, perhaps with
an eye on the 2016 presidential race, are demanding that Senate Minority
Leader Mitch McConnell block any spending bill that funds Obama’s
health care law as enrollment begins Oct. 1. There is no chance Obama
would sign a spending bill that takes money away from implementation of
his biggest achievement.
Meanwhile, McConnell and Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.), who might
otherwise help push a fiscal compromise, face 2014 primary challenges
that may make them less likely to cut deals with Obama. McConnell has
been pivotal in recent battles, including the fiscal cliff deal his
office hammered out at the last second with Vice President Joe Biden at
New Years. Don’t expect a replay this fall.
Former GOP presidential nominee Mitt Romney grew so concerned over
rhetoric from Rubio, Cruz and others that he used his first significant
post-2012 speech to urge Republicans to back down from the government
shutdown rhetoric. “We need to exercise great care about any talk
of shutting down government,” Romney said at a fundraiser in New
Hampshire on Aug. 6. “What would come next when soldiers aren’t paid,
when seniors fear for their Medicare and Social Security, and when the
FBI is off-duty?”
Republicans have not backed off their mantra of a dollar in spending
cuts for every dollar of debt-ceiling increase. But if they were to pass
such a bill out of the House, it would go nowhere in the Senate.
Democrats have no appetite for more cuts, given that annual deficits
have been sliced in half and the sequester spending cuts are already
taking a bite out of economic growth with no compromise on the horizon.
Housing prices and equity markets have been rising, small businesses
are showing more inclination to hire and spend, and threats from Europe
are receding, leaving D.C. dysfunction as among the top remaining risks.
“There’d be a host of severe economic consequences associated with
debt default. We’d have negative impact for growth, job creation,
interest rates would spike, it would make our deficit problems even
harder to tackle,” said Rob Nichols, president and CEO of the lobbying
group Financial Services Forum. “Raising the debt ceiling is a critical
and urgent task.”
All this means that the sequel Wall Street expects this fall could turn into a much scarier movie with unpredictable plot lines.
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