WASHINGTON — Are Republican lawmakers deliberately stalling the economic recovery to hurt President Barack Obama’s re-election chances? Some top Democrats say yes, pointing to GOP stances on the debt limit and other issues that they claim are causing unnecessary economic anxiety and retarding growth.

The latest Democratic complaint came after House Speaker John Boehner said Tuesday that when Congress raises the nation’s borrowing cap in early 2013, he will again insist on big spending cuts to offset the increase. Boehner, R-Ohio, continues to reject higher tax rates, which Democrats demand from the wealthy.

That led Sen. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., to say Boehner is virtually assuring another debt-ceiling crisis as bad or worse than the one that shook financial markets nine months ago.

“The last thing the country needs is a rerun of last summer’s debacle that nearly brought down our economy,” Schumer said in a statement. In an interview, Schumer added: “I hope that the speaker is not doing this because he doesn’t want to see the economy improve, because what he said will certainly rattle the markets.”

Boehner responded in a statement: “Republicans have passed nearly 30 bills that would help small businesses create jobs and we are waiting on Senate Democrats to vote on these common-sense measures. The failure to act on these jobs bills, as well as our crushing debt burden, is undermining economic growth and job creation.”

Democrats say Republicans loaded their jobs bills with provisions certain to doom them in the Senate, such as restrictions on unions and on regulatory agencies such as the Environmental Protection Agency.

Regardless of whether Schumer’s suspicions are right, there’s evidence that unceasing partisan gridlock and the prospect of big tax increases and spending cuts in January are causing some companies to postpone expansions. Even small economic slowdowns are bad news for Obama, who is seeking re-election amid high unemployment.

The Washington Post this past week compiled a list of military contractors, hospitals and universities that are delaying hires and bracing for cuts, partly because of fears that Washington’s partisan divisions will not abate.

The most obvious showdown will happen soon after the Nov. 6 election. Unless a lame-duck Congress can make deals, the economy will suffer a double whammy of large tax increases and spending cuts, starting Jan. 1. The tax increases would hit virtually every working American and the spending cuts would affect military and domestic programs.

Economists say that what Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke calls a “fiscal cliff” could possibly lead to another severe recession.

On top of that, perhaps by late January or so, Congress and the president — be it Obama or Republican Mitt Romney — will again confront the need to raise the country’s borrowing limit or else trigger a first-ever government failure to pay its debts. A partisan showdown over this issue last summer led to a downgrade in the nation’s credit worthiness and a sharp stock market drop.

These crucial decisions will occur after the presidential election. But investors, planners and business owners make decisions about hiring, expansion and investments months in advance. The more they worry about a serious economic downturn in nine months or so, the more reluctant they are to expand operations and hire workers now.

“All that uncertainty has us cautious, and we’re scaling back our hiring expectations,” said Eric Remington, vice president of Kaman Corp., which recently canceled plans to hire 200 new workers at a defense aerospace plant in Jacksonville, Fla.

“The law is, the automatic cuts will take effect on Jan. 1,” he said. “Everyone says, ‘Don’t worry, that won’t happen.’ But we’ve got a business to run, and we’ve got to plan.”

Schumer and other top Democrats have said for months that GOP lawmakers may be trying to strangle the economic recovery for political reasons.

“Their strategy is to suffocate the economy for the sake of what they think will be a political victory,” Obama’s campaign manager, Jim Messina, wrote in an email to supporters last October, when Congress was debating a jobs bill.

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., said his Republican counterpart was not cooperating on that legislation “in hopes that he can get my job, perhaps.”

Maryland Gov. Martin O’Malley, chairman of the Democratic Governors Association, told The Associated Press last year that some GOP lawmakers, “through their intransigence, cleverly set up a situation for America’s economy to fail, either by needlessly driving us to default, or needlessly driving us into massive public-sector layoffs.”

Federal, state and local government layoffs have been under way for months. They may be necessary to reduce deficits and survive recessions. But they increase unemployment, a problem for any president seeking a second term.

Since February 2010, when the economy began consistently adding jobs, the private sector has gained 4.2 million positions. But federal, state and local governments during that time have cut more than 500,000 jobs.

House Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi of California did not ascribe partisan motives to Boehner’s latest warnings about the next debt ceiling showdown. But she said he may be unnecessarily hurting the economy. “It already can be damaging, just the fact that it’s brought up,” Pelosi told reporters Thursday.

Republicans say it’s absurd to make such an accusation. They point to bipartisan efforts to pass jobs-creation bills, trade pacts and, after some arguments, an extension of the payroll tax cut that Obama originally had proposed for only one year.

GOP lawmakers want Congress to act this year to ensure that none of the Bush-era income tax cuts will expire, as scheduled, on Jan. 1. Such assurance, they say, could lead investors and business owners to start expanding and hiring now.

Democrats say the move, by itself, would increase the deficit dramatically. They want to end the tax cuts for the wealthiest and they note that the economy boomed during Bill Clinton’s presidency, before the big tax cuts of 2001 and 2003 were enacted.

Boehner’s aides say the speaker supports tax law changes, including eliminating some loopholes and exemptions, that could result in greater revenue even if rates remain the same or are reduced.

As for the debt limit, “allowing America to default would be irresponsible,” Boehner said Tuesday at an economic forum. “But it would be more irresponsible to raise the debt ceiling without taking dramatic steps to reduce spending and reform the budget process.”

Democrats say that’s precisely the type of economic saber-rattling that can frighten investors and employers, and damage Obama’s re-election hopes. Boehner disagrees.

“I said that we should not wait until the 11th hour to address these issues,” Boehner told reporters Thursday. “The only ones who are talking about drama or brinksmanship are my Democrat colleagues.”

The danger of another credit-rating downgrade “comes from continued inaction on the deficit, and our piling debt,” he said, not from “calls for action.”

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21 Comments

  1. I heard all I needed to hear to make up my mind what the Republicans are trying to do.  From the mouth of Mitch McConnell himself.  His goal is to ensure President Obama will be a one term president.  Sickening.

  2. Sure I got the news letter last week.  Lest all you lefties forget Omama himself said in no uncertain terms he would shut down the coal industry in America. Let us also not forgot he has increased the debt more then any other potus in history and his Omama care is sure if allowed to stand drive us way over the brink.

    1. Wrong Bush increased the debt by $6.1 trillion with tax cuts, 2 unfunded wars, Medicare Part D and two economic down turns.  Obama has increased teh debt by $2.4 Trillion by keeping the Bush Tax cuts, the stimulus and the effects of Bush’s second economic downturn.

      The so-called Obamacare is predicted to lower health costs and reduce the debt over the next 20 years.  The biggest obstical to lowering the costs of Medicare is the Republican backed Medicare Part D that makes it illegal for Medicare to negotiate lower drug prices for their customers ensuring the continued obscene drug company profits.

    2. You are wrong.  Reagan tripled the national debt and W. increased it by more than twice than the amount under Obama.  It’s one thing to not like the President, but this is easy to look up so please get your facts right.

      1.  WOW really. Cutting taxes is NOT a DEBT!!! Of course the folks who pay no taxes cause they do not earn anything would not understand that.

        As far as Omama care please tell me ONE government program that has cost what we where told it would and that actually costs less then then the private sector would!!

        BTW you completely avoided Omamas war on the coal industry  that alone will cost us more then anything in terms of energy cost..

        Being on the facts please I really can not wait to hear them.

        1. FACT: President Reagan tripled (that’s 3X) the debt when he was in office and W. doubled it!  Your claim that President increased it by more than any other president is wrong. That’s a fact!

          As they say: you can your own opinion, but not your own facts.

  3. The Republicans have been sabotaging the American Economy  since Obama took office. Both Boener and McConnell said that they will make him a one term president. Not one jobs bill has passed in almost 4 years now. The bridges are collapsing yet the Republicans would rather see Americans die then fix the bridges. The Republicans have downgraded US Bonds for the first time ever with their brinkmanship on extending the national debt. So many  bills that would benefited the United States economically but the Republicans filibuster in the Senate and the Tea Party Republicans vote jobs down in the house. Time to vote all Republicans out of office this November.

    1. To the point, accurately and factually correct and with a foreseeable timeline. Well done Knight’s !! Now if only the Maine Legislature could be a smart. Then we all might be able to get Maine moving. And no one can tell me that the private sector and labor can’t see the need to cooperate. Maybe the BIW/Union negotiator’s could fix the House and Senate. Given how thing’s are going now, they’ed be a dammed sight more effective ! 

    2. So if this is all the GOP’s fault why didnt the wonderful democrats fix the problems while they held both houses of Congress (filibuster proof majorities too) and the White House for 2 years? Your commie heros could have passed ANY bill they wanted to become law. They COULD have done all the things they promised morons like you to get your vote (like closing Gitmo) but instead they got your vote and then decided you didnt matter and didnt pass anything. And yet, to an MSNBC parroter like you, “its all the GOP”s fault..boo hooo..sniffle sniffle”. How absolutely PATHETIC the left is.

    3. Oh and I would be remiss if I didnt ask. Why havent the democrats in the Senate passed a budget in over 1000 days? The party of eunichs could have passed one little tiny budget over the past 3 years, but instead I guess they were trying to hide some spending. Funny how at the same time they rang us taxpayers up for $6 trillion hun? What an amazing coincidence. I realize now the reason the left is so screwed up. They cant even manage to create a budget, nevermind control their spending.

  4. Really?  Is this kind of talk the least bit helpful?  To believe that one party or the other is out to destroy the economy, on purpose,  is quite frankly, ludicrous.    The economy may yet be destroyed, but at least I feel fairly certain it will be destroyed by accident.  :)

  5. So, the Republicans are standing in the way of a reasonable compromise of ‘tax increases now, spending cuts later’? How dast they, when it’s proven to be such a workable plan in the past!

  6. “Are Republican lawmakers deliberately stalling the economic recovery to hurt President Barack Obama’s re-election chances?”
    What recovery?
    It isn’t the growth that is retarded here it is the policies which are killing the growth.  The policies put in place by this President who gets all the credit for what has not been accomplished in his term. 

  7. Until free trade is modified to at least fair trade America is doomed. The republican trickle down theory doesn’t work with free trade the money trickles into the Wall Street economy and China is the beneficiary of the cash. It takes big business to thrive in order for small business to survive.

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