Obama's budget win has strings attached

US President Barack Obama has forced conservative Republicans to back down in the fiscal fight, but can he prevail when the next deadline rolls around?

President Barack Obama has emerged far stronger than his Republican adversaries in Washington's latest fiscal fight. He gave away virtually nothing and his hard-line tactics exposed deep divisions among Republicans and growing public frustration with the conservative party.

But Obama's victory came with strings attached. Under his watch, big swathes of the federal government were shuttered for 16 days, forcing hundreds of thousands of workers off the job and restricting many services. The nation was brought to the brink of a default for the second time in two years.

Congress' last-minute deal generated yet another round of looming deadlines on the same issues - funding the government and raising the country's borrowing limit to prevent a default on its obligations. And there is no guarantee that Republican opposition to Obama's objectives will be dampened in any way.

"What comes next is very unpredictable," said Steve Schmidt, a Republican strategist. "The notion that this group of people is going to be chastened by this, while it seems obvious, is uncertain."

Indeed, there's little consensus among Republicans about how to proceed in the aftermath of the budget crisis. Some conservatives who demanded changes to Obama's healthcare law in exchange for funding the government have signalled they're ready to dig in for another fight. Among them is Kansas congressman Tim Huelskamp, who said Republicans may have "lost the battle but we're going to win the war".

But other Republican lawmakers are demanding that their party make a course correction.

"Hopefully, the lesson is to stop this foolish childishness," said John McCain, the longtime Arizona senator who ran unsuccessfully for president against Obama in 2008.

Republicans will have to quickly settle on a strategy. The deal that ended this month's stand-off only keeps the government open through January 15 and extends borrowing authority through February 7, though emergency measures may give the administration another month before reaching the debt limit. The agreement also requires bipartisan negotiators to issue a report by December 13 on broader budget issues such as spending levels and deficit reduction - matters over which the White House and congressional Republicans have long been at odds.

What happens during this next round of deadlines will help clarify whether Obama's October win has done anything to alter the political dynamic in Washington or whether it was an isolated achievement.

The White House said the president is entering the next phase of the debate with a similarly unyielding strategy. Aides said he is willing to make concessions as part of a larger budget deal, but won't let Republicans make funding the government or lifting the debt ceiling contingent on certain outcomes.

Some Republican leaders had assumed Obama would abandon that hardline stance during the most recent debate. Many were taking their lessons from the last budget and debt fight in 2011, when Obama indeed made concessions to keep the government open and avoid a default.

But Republicans misread how political shifts in Washington over the past two years had affected the president, and in particular how Obama's resolve had been stiffened by the fact he doesn't have to run for office again.

Staunch conservatives also ignored warnings from more moderate Republicans, who argued that Obama would never agree to changes in the healthcare law, which is intended to provide coverage for millions of uninsured Americans and remains the president's signature legislative achievement.

"A fundamental flaw - and probably the biggest flaw - was that they were negotiating for something that wasn't really negotiable," said Patrick Griffin, who served as President Bill Clinton's legislative affairs director during the 1995 government shutdown.

The start of the government shutdown coincided with the start of sign-ups for the "Obamacare" law's health insurance exchanges - a rollout that was marred by widespread problems. In an ironic twist, the Republican insistence on shutting down the government to make changes to the law wound up overshadowing its glitches and a glaring embarrassment for the president.

The result of the miscalculations: a wave of public opinion polls showing that the Republicans took the biggest hit as the budget war dragged on.

Despite their dour approval ratings, Republicans may again try to test whether Obama is willing to hold his hard line in the new year. But Obama - long a believer in the power of public opinion - is banking that the anger Americans aimed at Republicans in recent weeks will persuade them to shift course.


Share

5 min read

Published

Updated

Source: AAP


Share this with family and friends


Get SBS News daily and direct to your Inbox

Sign up now for the latest news from Australia and around the world direct to your inbox.

By subscribing, you agree to SBS’s terms of service and privacy policy including receiving email updates from SBS.

Download our apps
SBS News
SBS Audio
SBS On Demand

Listen to our podcasts
An overview of the day's top stories from SBS News
Interviews and feature reports from SBS News
Your daily ten minute finance and business news wrap with SBS Finance Editor Ricardo Gonçalves.
A daily five minute news wrap for English learners and people with disability
Get the latest with our News podcasts on your favourite podcast apps.

Watch on SBS
SBS World News

SBS World News

Take a global view with Australia's most comprehensive world news service
Watch the latest news videos from Australia and across the world