Wonkbook: The GOP's dual-trigger nightmare
by Ezra Klein
Imagine if the Democrats offered Republicans a deficit deal that had more than $3 in tax increases for every $1 in spending cuts, assigned most of those spending cuts to the Pentagon, and didn't take a dime from Social Security, Medicaid or Medicare beneficiaries.
Republicans would laugh at them. But without quite realizing it, that's the deal Republicans have now offered to the Democrats.
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So now there are two triggers.
One is an extremely progressive spending trigger --half from the DoD--and worth $1.2 trillion-- that goes off on January 1, 2013.
The other is an extremely progressive Bush tax cut expiration- atax trigger worth $3.8 trillion that goes off on...January 1, 2013.
If you count reduced interest payments, the two policies alone would reduce future deficits by about $6 trillion. That's far more than anything the supercommittee came close to discussing. It's distributed far more progressively than anything the Democrats have even considered proposing. And all that needs to happen for it to pass is, well, nothing. Republicans can't stop these triggers on their own. They need Senate Democrats and President Obama to join them in passing an alternative, or they need House and Senate Democrats to join them in overturning President Obama's veto of their alternative. So the only way for Republicans to avoid this dual-trigger nightmare is to somehow convince Democrats to bail them out.