Mitch McConnell Plan

Is McConnell's plan a worthwhile solution?

  • Yes, if it is only for the rest of the fiscal year and is revisited .

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Yes, only if no other plan can be secured.

    Votes: 0 0.0%

  • Total voters
    3
  • Poll closed .

Canceled2

Banned
Mitch McConnell has devised a plan for raising the debt the ceiling that is quite cunning.

It essentially puts the onus of raising the debt ceiling along with its economic consequences squarely on the shoulders of the president, while allowing republicans to vote no. I get that McConnell is looking to Obama's ouster with this move-but personally I hate the blatant and purely political machinations of such a plan.
 
Interesting I came upon this tonight:

http://www.nationalreview.com/blogs/print/272365

Lights Out for McConnell-Reid?
By Andrew Stiles
Posted on July 20, 2011 7:31 PM

A letter being circulated by freshman Rep. Joe Walsh (R., Ill.) could effectively take the contingency plan being crafted by Senate leaders Harry Reid (D., Nev.) and Mitch McConnell (R., Ky.) — it’s being referred to as “McConnell-Reid” — completely off the table in debt-ceiling negotiations.

Walsh tells National Review Online that he has received close to 90 signatures on his letter, which is addressed to House Speaker John Boehner (R., Ohio) and Majority Leader Eric Cantor (R., Va.) and urges them to publicly denounce the McConnell plan (or some version thereof) and ensure that it never comes up for a vote. He says that “people close to leadership” have told him that they are aware of the letter and the number of signatures (nearly 40 percent of the Republican caucus) and that it has “had an impact” on their decision making. In all likelihood, Boehner cannot afford another mass defection within the caucus (as with the continuing resolution to avoid a government shutdown in April)...

If the impact of Walsh’s letter is to effectively preclude (or render moot) a vote on the McConnell plan in one form or another, it would be a significant development in the ongoing stalemate over the debt ceiling, because (despite the recent resurrection of the Gang of Six) many believe that McConnell-Reid is the most realistic — and perhaps only — way forward at this point.

Walsh says his office has been contacted by Senate staff members — Republican and Democratic — who have been asking about the letter’s popularity. Greg Sargent reports that some Senate GOP aides were hoping it would receive no more than 50 signatures. That hope went out the window quickly, however, once the conservative group Club for Growth joined the effort and, in a rare twist, announced it would “key vote” whether or not members signed on to the letter. A number of other outside groups piled on as well.

Walsh suggests that the success of his effort could have prompted the Gang of Six to unveil their proposal when they did as “a last-ditch effort to delay,” once it became clear that McConnell-Reid could not possibly pass the House. Beyond that, he says of the Gang’s plan, “I don’t think there’s anything there.”

“The rank and file, through the letter, is making that clear that [McConnell-Reid] is not going anywhere in the House,” he says. “I think the grand plan was, if I had to guess, everybody in leadership wanted to fall back on the McConnell plan. So pretty quickly the Gang of Six reappeared.”

Walsh is still collecting signatures, and plans to deliver the letter to leaders sometime tomorrow. By then he hopes to have at least 100. Stay tuned.
 
Mitch McConnell has devised a plan for raising the debt the ceiling that is quite cunning.

It essentially puts the onus of raising the debt ceiling along with its economic consequences squarely on the shoulders of the president, while allowing republicans to vote no. I get that McConnell is looking to Obama's ouster with this move-but personally I hate the blatant and purely political machinations of such a plan.
I wouldn't exactly call it a plan, be that as it may, their may be no choice. There may not be enough time, even if there is an agreement, to get the law written and into the congressional record by Aug 2.

It just frustrates the hell out of me that after 8 years of Republicans spending money like drunken sailors they now get religion on the budget deficit.
 
If Congress can vote on it, its a plan............

Why don't our pinhead in the white house present a plan .....Congress don't vote on speeches, generalities and sound bites....
 
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