"Dictators are horrible. Unless, of course, it's *our* dictator"
---Guy McPherson
Analyst: Obama Will Raise The Debt Ceiling On His Own And Worry About The Legal Consequences Later
23 September, 20-13
In the summer of 2011, some Democrats urged President Obama to simply raise the debt ceiling himself if Republicans were decidedly against passing legislation.
There was the “trillion dollar coin” idea, whereby the government mints itself out of trouble via an arcane bullion law.
Then there was the 14th Amendment option. Here, the government would have to take a modern interpretation on the Civil War-era amendment about the “validity of the public debt of the United States,” and surely face legal action.
Now as the two parties gear up for another debt ceiling bout, Greg Valliere at Potomac Research thinks Obama may be coming around to the idea of acting on his own. Valliere writes to clients:
Obama is not shy about using executive authority, and he surely has heard from Constitutional scholars who believe he has the authority to raise the debt ceiling on his own. (Bill Clinton urged Obama to take this approach in the summer of 2011.) Fearless forecast:
if Treasury is out of money in early November and a default looks possible, Obama will simply raise the debt ceiling. He’ll face instant litigation, but that wouldn’t be resolved for months.
It seems the president is not willing to negotiate at all for a raise in the debt ceiling, as he made clear to Speaker John Boehner in a phone call last week. We’ll see what happens.
Step Aside Trillion Dollar Coin, Here Comes The Trillion Dollar Bill
23
September, 2013
With
just over a week left until a potential government shutdown,
especially since the House just passed a stopgap funding measure
which included an Obamacare defunding measure and which is dead in
the Senate, the issue of a government shutdown with no
counterproposal on the table is suddenly concerning to investors, as
can be seen in the following Bloomberg chart comparing articles
mentioning "government shutdown" vs "debt ceiling."
However,
it should be the other way around: while Congress may gamble with the
debt ceiling until the 11th hour and 59th minute, as it knows it can
always punt to Bernanke and "Mr
Chair(wo)man will get to work",
it will hardly jeopardize paying itself a salary for a terrific job
well done.
So
as we await for the inevitable announcement when the government will
promptly resume paying itself, we are far more interested in how long
it will take until the debt ceiling fight takes front and center
space, and the now annual tradition launched by a handful of monetary
misfits, namely the pitching of the idiotic
platinum trollin' trillion
dollar coin idea, even though the Fed and Treasury took an
unprecedented step and publicly told said misfits to
kill the idea before they
lose any more of what little credibility they had left by filling the
internet with their vacuous stupidity.
Sadly,
since US fiscal and monetary policy en
masse has
become just that, vacuous
stupidity,
we wish to introduce our own piece of monetary ridiculousness: the
trillion dollar bill.
It
is not made out of platinum - in fact Charmin' one-ply will do - but
the good news is that the Treasury would merely have to issue a
trillion dollar bond to net out the Fed's balance sheet upon its
monetization (and the last thing Congress has problems with is
authorizing the spending ludicrous amount of money). After all, under
the auspices of the Magic Money Tree
theory of money, infinite government debt is simply a manifestation
of infinite wealth for the private sector, and as such it is a
win-win for everyone.
So
without further ado, here is the solution to all of America's debt
problems: the
Trillion Dollar Bill.
No
mid-Oct. paycheck for troops if government shuts down, lawmaker says
With
one week to go before a potential partial government shutdown, a key
Republican lawmaker is warning troops to be financially prepared for
the possibility of not getting a mid-October paycheck.
23
September, 2013
Rep.
C.W. “Bill” Young, R-Fla., chairman of the House defense
appropriations subcommittee, warns that the troops’ morale and
readiness will suffer even though the Defense Department does not
shut down when its funding stops.
“All
military personnel will continue to serve and accrue pay, but will
not actually be paid until appropriations are available,” Young
said. The mid-month payday would be the first in jeopardy.
Additionally,
he said most travel and permanent change of station moves “would be
delayed or canceled” and benefits for line-of-duty deaths also
would be suspended.
Military
hospitals and clinics will remain open but would scale back on
operations, “impacting routine medical and dental procedures,”
Young said. He did not specifically mention any impact on Tricare
health insurance benefits, but in past government shutdowns, payments
to medical providers were delayed but treatment was still available.
Maintenance
for facilities and weapons would stop, Young said, and most defense
and service civilian employees would be “furloughed until
appropriations are available.”
“Readiness
and morale of our armed forces will suffer,” he said. “The impact
of a shutdown on the department and the military and civilian
families — many of whom live paycheck to paycheck — is simply
catastrophic.”
On
Friday, the House of Representatives passed a 76-day funding bill
that would keep the government running from Oct. 1, the start of
fiscal 2014, until Dec. 15. Most government agencies, including the
Defense Department, could continue operating at existing funding
levels.
A
bill to keep the government running is not unusual, but this measure,
H.J. Res. 59, is different. It includes a section defunding the 2010
Affordable Care Act health care reform. The White House has warned
that President Obama would veto the bill if this provision is
included.
There
is a second, equally controversial rider on the bill, the Full Faith
and Credit Act, which details a priority list for paying bills if the
government exceeds its $16.7 trillion debt limit. Creditors would be
paid first, with military and federal civilian paychecks, disabled
veterans’ checks, Medicare payments to doctors, school lunch
programs and other government debts ranking lower.
The
Senate is due to take up the short-term spending bill Monday, but
there is a deadline of midnight Sept. 30 for enactment of a bill to
avoid shutdown.
Rep.
Hal Rogers, R-Ky., the House Appropriations Committee chairman,
agreed with Young’s assessment that troops won’t get paid if the
government runs out of money.
“A
government shutdown is a political game in which everyone loses,”
he said, calling the House-passed bill one that “simply keeps the
lights on in our government.”
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