Republicans avoid shutdown by cutting deal with Democrats over their own party’s hardliners

    • Salamendacious@lemmy.worldOP
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      1 year ago

      It didn’t read that way to me. This could be the end of McCarthy as speaker because he worked with Democrats. Did you see the paragraph:

      Jim McGovern, a Democrat from Massachusetts, offered a simple commentary as he left the floor following the vote: “We won.”

      • thisisthelastonebtw@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        The headline made it sound like the Republicans avoided it; that’s all. You know most Republicans don’t read anything more than a headline. :) I’m mostly frustrated with that is all. The context almost always leans differently.

        Republicans avoid shutdown by cutting deal with Democrats over their own party’s hardliners

        Any Republican who reads that, what do you think they read? I know what I think, and, unfortunately, as an observer of those people’s reactions, I’m positive that’s how they’ll read it.

    • phoenixz@lemmy.ca
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      1 year ago

      Well technically they did work hard… at blocking anything possible to stop this shutdown, because a shutdown is good for a very few rich assholes

    • twistypencil@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      True, but they can’t win this, so either have to damage themselves over and over again, or grow up and be leaders of their constituents, which means explaining a little bit to them reality instead of blindly being pushed around by ignorant sheep

  • maporita@unilem.org
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    1 year ago

    The problem is that this solves nothing. Since COVID the US has been writing checks it cannot cash and the party will come to an end sooner or later. The longer we kick the can down the road the more painful it will be. Republicans won’t increase taxes (even Biden didn’t roll back Trump’s tax cuts). And Democrats won’t cut entitlement spending. So we are essentially screwed.

    • Salamendacious@lemmy.worldOP
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      1 year ago

      You’re absolutely right that projecting our current debt and revenue unchanged into the future looks disastrous. HW Bush raised taxes and it very likely contributed to his reelection loss. Clinton raised taxes and balanced the budget. I think it’s definitely possible to begin paying off the debt in such a way that doesn’t crush the economy with an austerity backlash. Both of those presidents’ tax increases didn’t kill the economy. It took W Bush’s “ownership society” deregulation to do that.

      There’s also the possibility of a future economic shift that could put everything as we know it in flux: a new energy source, automation that replaces overseas manufacturing, or asteroid mining are all examples of things that are at least possible if not plausible to be on the horizon. Not too mention something we can’t even conceive of. Very few people in 1900 would predict the model T was on the horizon.

      I’m definitely apprehensive about the economic future but I’m personally not terrified that it’ll be some kind of doomsday.