Townhall Media Announces Larry O’Connor As New Editor of Townhall
Unforced Errors and the Need for Discipline
There's an Eerie Silence From Frey and Walz Over Don Lemon's Church Storming...
Wait, There's No Way a CNN Guest Did This After Getting Roasted by...
Trump Congratulated the Florida Panthers on Their Stanley Cup Win With a Tremendous...
Send in the Troops, Mr. President
Throw the Book at Corrupt Democrats in Minnesota and Everywhere Else
It’s Not 'Racism' or 'White Supremacy,' It’s the Declaration of Independence
A Bad Bet
This Is No Way to Gimme Shelter
America's Three-Party System
The Neighborhoods the Silent Generation Built
AI and Gambling: The Two Fastest-Growing Sectors of the Economy
John Marshall: Judicial Independence and the Safeguard of Religious Liberty
While Canada Moves Against the U.S. Over Greenland, We Just Beat Them at...
OPINION

Why This Default Debate Is Different

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.
Things were different the last time a Democratic president and a Republican House played a drawn-out game of chicken with the “full faith and credit” of the United States. That was the mid-1990s, when Newt Gingrich, then the new Speaker of the House, seemed to see himself as a Man of History. Like today’s tea partiers, Gingrich was supremely self-confident that his party’s decisive takeover of the House represented a broad shift and a mandate for drastic cuts in spending and a balanced budget.
Advertisement

Yet after Gingrich and Majority Leader Dick Armey suggested they might go so far as to allow the government to default on its debt, the political mood changed dramatically. Standard & Poor’s and Moody’s issued warnings and Wall Street, whose views were channeled by then-Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan in private meetings with Republicans, made its unhappiness known. Following two unpopular government shutdowns, “the idea of default became so politically charged that few people wanted to be associated with it any longer,” former Treasury Secretary Robert Rubin wrote in his 2003 memoir, In An Uncertain World. “At some point, our opponents simply stopped fighting.”

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement