Barry
Grey
June
3, 2023
The
rapid and lopsided passage by both houses of Congress of the debt ceiling bill
worked out between President Joe Biden and Republican House Speaker Kevin
McCarthy, with the Democrats supplying the bulk of the votes, exposes the
unbridgeable class chasm between the entire political establishment and the
working class.
Despite
their mutual recriminations, the two parties of American capitalism united in
imposing the full cost of war on working people and youth. They used the debt
ceiling and the specter of a “catastrophic” default on US debt obligations to
mount an elaborate charade of “crisis” negotiations as the cover for imposing a
brutal package of austerity measures.
The
final act in the play came during the Senate vote on Thursday, when Republican
Senator Lindsey Graham called the bill a “gift to China” and demanded an even
bigger increase in military spending. Senate Majority Leader Charles Schumer
(Democrat) and Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (Republican) dutifully replied
by issuing a joint statement declaring that the “debt ceiling deal does nothing
to limit the Senate’s ability to appropriate emergency supplemental funds to
ensure our military capabilities are sufficient to deter China, Russia, and our
other adversaries.”
In
other words, while the cuts and caps on social programs are firm, unlimited
financing of the US war machine will proceed without interruption.
Friday
evening, Biden delivered a prime time address praising the agreement and the
unity between the two parties in reaching it. “No one got everything they
wanted,” he declared, “but the American people got what they needed.” In fact,
Wall Street and the military got precisely what they wanted, though the bill is
only a down payment on what is planned. As for the “American people,” the
working class will be forced to foot the bill.
Throughout
the process, the financial parasites remained unperturbed, knowing that a
resolution entirely favorable to them was assured. The markets did not react to
the talk of an impending “crisis” and celebrated the passage of the so-called
“Fiscal Responsibility Act” with a sharp rise on Friday.
The
corporate media uniformly promoted the official line, covering up the facts
behind the rapid growth of the national debt—trillions of dollars in tax cuts for
corporations and the rich, trillions more in bailouts of banks and speculators,
and record spending on the military. No mention was made of the fact that
social spending has declined sharply since the last debt ceiling deal, under
the Obama-Biden administration in 2011, while corporate taxes have fallen by 60
percent and profits have repeatedly set new records.
The
“crisis” supposedly showed that it was high time to end “profligate” spending
on such things as housing, schools, health care, the environment, public
transit and nutrition! The Wall Street Journal editorialized in support of the
deal, particularly its new work requirements for older food stamp (Supplemental
Nutrition Assistance Program—SNAP) recipients, on the grounds that it marked a
step forward in restoring “a culture of work.”
The
agreement includes caps for fiscal years 2024 and 2025 on non-military
discretionary spending, rescission of $30 billion in unspent COVID relief
funds, a $20 billion cut in Internal Revenue Service tax enforcement, and an
August 30 termination of the moratorium on repayment of student debt.
Other
provisions include the gutting of the 1970 National Environmental Policy Act to
green-light fossil fuel drilling and other energy projects. There is also a 1
percent across-the-board cut in domestic spending for this year if Congress
fails to enact all 12 appropriations bills by January 1, 2024, something that
has not happened since 1997. This penalty would slash more spending than all
the cuts spelled out in the rest of the legislation combined. It sets the stage
for a budget crisis in an election year and the threat of a government
shutdown.
As
McCarthy repeatedly declared, the cuts included in the debt ceiling deal are
only down payments on the gutting of all that remains of a social safety net.
In
a June 1 editorial, the Democratic Party-aligned Washington Post hailed the
austerity measures in the bipartisan bill, estimated by the Congressional
Budget Office to reduce federal spending by $1.5 trillion over the next decade,
while reiterating its demand that the core entitlement programs—Social Security
and Medicare—be slashed as well. It called for “structural change to the real
drivers of debt and deficits: health care and retirement programs.”
This
is, in fact, the goal of both big business parties, whatever tactical
differences they may have over how to get there.
The
efforts of the so-called “progressive” wing of the Democratic Party, including
the pseudo-left Democratic Socialists of America members in the House of
Representatives, to downplay the role of Biden and the Democrats and place the
blame for the austerity measures entirely on the Republicans have been
shattered by the actual outcome of the voting in both the House and Senate.
In
the House, which passed the bill on Wednesday, the vote was 314-117, with the
Democrats voting 165-46 for the bill (80 percent), compared with the
Republicans voting for it by 149-71 (67 percent). Moreover, the Democrats
rescued the bill from being blocked in an earlier procedural vote, breaking
with convention on such matters and supplying more than 50 votes to overcome
opposition from 29 members of the Republican House Freedom Caucus.
In
the Senate, the bill passed by a vote of 63 to 36, with only four of the
Democrats plus the nominally independent Bernie Sanders voting “no.” Not a
single Democrat in either chamber rose to demand a cut in military spending,
which under the bill increases by 3 percent this year to a record high of
nearly $1 trillion and rises by an equivalent amount next year.
Biden’s
response to Trump’s attempted fascist coup of January 6, 2021 was to rescue the
Republican Party and work out a modus operandi with it to prosecute US
imperialism’s aggressive policy toward Russia. Hence his pleas for “unity” and
“bipartisanship.” Now the program of war abroad is joined with war against the
working class at home, and it too is a bipartisan policy.
This
did not prevent DSA Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez from tweeting:
“Republicans need to own this vote. This was their deal. This was their
negotiations. They’re the ones trying to come in and cut SNAP, cut
environmental protections, trying to ram through an oil pipeline through a
community that does not want it.”
The
DSA functions as a faction of the Democratic Party. In 2020 it supported
Sanders in the Democratic primaries, and when Sanders pulled out it backed
Biden as a “lesser evil” to Trump. The DSA-aligned Jacobin promoted illusions
in Biden, publishing an article after he was declared the victor in November
2020 with the headline: “Celebrate Today, Fight Tomorrow.”
In
all of its reporting on the debt ceiling “crisis,” Jacobin has never raised the
issue of the US-NATO war against Russia in Ukraine. That is because it and the
DSA support US imperialism and its wars for global hegemony.
In
the US, as all over the world—France, Sri Lanka, Britain—the attempt of the
ruling classes to make the working class pay for war by destroying social
benefits is fueling a massive upsurge of the working class. It is critical that
this movement be given a conscious international and revolutionary socialist
perspective, politically independent of all the parties and organizations of
the ruling class.
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