Thank you for subscribing to Off Message. This is a public post, available to all so please share it widely. If you enjoy this newsletter, I hope you’ll consider upgrading to a paid subscription, for access to everything we do. Your support makes Off Message possible. Thank you again. Events (the ones you’re thinking of) overtook this week’s Friday essay, so I decided to hold it for the time being. But to keep my end of the bargain with free subscribers, and the rest of the open internet, I thought I’d flag a few stories unfolding mostly out of view. INFINITE HASCREAMBehind the paywall of my writeup of the Donald Trump-Jeffrey Epstein bombshell, I alluded to an opportunity House Democrats had to kill an unassuming but important Republican bill. You may have seen this alluded to over the past few weeks as a “rescission package,” because its purpose is to “rescind” funds Congress instructed the executive branch to spend in its appropriations legislation. This can be routine—sometimes there’s money left over, or consensus that certain programs should be defunded—and in routine scenarios, the process is unremarkable: The president formally requests the rescission, and Congress votes on it up or down—no filibuster. The only catch is that, by law, Congress must act within 45 days of the request or the funds must be spent. What made this rescission request extraordinary is the lack of consensus. Trump and Republicans wanted to retroactively defund public media, food aid, and other line items Democrats strongly support. There’s no rule or law preventing a partisan majority from approving the rescissions anyhow, but in practice it amounts to a huge breach of faith. The parties compromise to fund the government, then a partisan bloc reneges on the agreement, transforming the federal budget into one that could never have passed in the first place. Republicans decided to renege, making fools of the Senate Democrats who helped them pass the budget back in March, and laying down a marker for the coming appropriations deadline: we reserve the right to amend any budget you pass, so either eat shit or shut down the government. On the face of it, that’s all on Republicans. They deal in bad faith, but they had the votes. Except yesterday was day 44. To kill the bill, all House Democrats had to do was slow things down for 24 hours, and the rescissions would expire. Hakeem Jeffries in particular enjoys a tool called a “magic minute,” which allows the minority leader to hold the House floor as long as he can before final passage of legislation. But then a few hours after the Epstein news broke, House Republicans passed their rescissions unobstructed. Here’s how Axios previewed the cave, in a Thursday piece I didn’t happen upon until Friday morning:
To summarize, Republicans said their plan was to abuse power to play Democrats for suckers. Democrats had an opportunity stop them, but chose to accept the slap in the face, offering four excuses:
Well, I’m here to alert Democratic voters and lengthen their memories.
We chose not to stand up for ourselves, our constituents, the party, and important priorities—in a fight we could’ve won—because quitting was easier, and, really, the people who hold us to a high standard kind of suck. House Democrats allowed Republicans to alter this deal unilaterally. If Senate Democrats help Republicans pass new appropriations in the next couple months, without refunding the rescinded spending and changing the law to close the rescission loophole, they’ll be retroactively sanctioning this double-cross, and setting themselves up as suckers all over again. |