Rove Group Blasts Obama's Sequester: 'It's His Mess, Let Him Clean It Up'
Playing the sequester blame game
By Jon Healey, Los Angeles Times
There's been little sign of movement by Democrats or Republicans
toward a deal this week on the "sequester," the $85 billion
across-the-board cuts in discretionary programs due to begin March 1.
President Obama and congressional Democrats have stuck with their
argument that the spending cuts should be replaced at least in part by
higher taxes and reduced farm subsidies. And Republicans have resolutely
rejected anything that looks like a tax hike.
Nevertheless, the rhetoric about the sequester is intensifying,
betraying how worried both sides are -- not about the cuts themselves,
necessarily, but about the chance that the public would blame them for
what ensues. The Republican National Committee, for example, released a
video on YouTube on Thursday arguing that Obama was for the sequester
before he was against it. Naturally, it took his comments about the
sequester completely out of context, as Buzzfeed's Andrew Kaczynski
pointed out. Still, the operative Republican talking point is that the
White House came up with this crazy idea, so if it actually happens,
it's not the GOP's fault.
Democrats, meanwhile, are trying to focus the public's attention on
the personnel and services that will be cut -- such as FBI and Border
Patrol agents, air traffic controllers and Head Start slots -- and
accusing Republicans of refusing to consider the Democrats' alternative.
Although Obama has led the charge on this front, the Democratic
Congressional Campaign Committee released videos Thursday blasting 27
individual Republican House members for doing more to protect
"millionaires" than the economy.
The committee's videos tout the Democrats' proposed replacement for
the sequester without mentioning that it's built around another
multibillion-dollar tax hike -- the second so far this year. Yet that's
the make-or-break issue here. Neither side wants to furlough air traffic
controllers or customs agents, but Republicans want to lock in more
spending cuts, and that's one thing the sequester would deliver.
So if nothing changes and the sequester goes into effect, will the
public blame Republicans for refusing to consider replacing the cuts
with tax hikes on high-income Americans and oil and gas companies? Will
they blame Democrats for failing to offer an alternative the GOP might
possibly support? Will they blame Obama for coming up with the idea,
thinking the prospect of a sequester was so horrible that it would help
break the congressional logjam on a long-term plan to reduce the
deficit?
Read the full story at the L.A. Times
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