I see that the Washington Post editorial board is shocked, shocked to discover that the incoming Republicans arent serious about deficit reduction. Who could have suspected? I was going to be snarky all the way here, but actually lets be serious: the gullibility of much of the media establishment on all this amounts to journalistic malpractice..
Republicans have, after all, been the party of fiscal irresponsibility since 1980; the GW Bush administration confirmed, if anyone was in doubt, that unfunded tax cuts are now in the partys DNA.
Then along comes a Democratic president who presides over all of two years of deficits in the immediate aftermath of a severe financial crisis which is a time when youre actually supposed to run deficits. Republicans begin inveighing against the evils of red ink and, incredibly, get taken at face value.
And even if you didnt know the history, if you actually paid attention to what leading Republicans were saying, their lack of seriousness was totally obvious. You had the Ryan plan, which claimed to reduce the deficit but, if you actually looked into it at all, relied completely on magic asterisks; you had the declarations by top Republicans that deficits are terrible but theres no need to offset the cost of tax cuts.
The idea that these people were allowed to pose as deficit hawks is stunning.
Oh, and for those claiming that Republicans have always said that spending, not deficits is what matters: first of all, this is very much revisionist history; you cant denounce the federal debt, then claim that you never cared about the revenue side of things. Beyond that, the deficit scare tactics lately have been all about solvency, not mere crowding out; repent, they said, or youll turn into Greeeeeece. Thats a scare story about solvency, for which the deficit, not spending, is what matters.
Why the blindness? I suspect a lot of it had to do with the desire to seem balanced. Journalists felt that they had to find Republican fiscal heroes, just to show how even-handed and open-minded they were. To say that the whole deficit thing was a political ploy, with no substance behind it, sounded shrill.
The truth often does.