Washington is doing everything it can to avoid the hard calls that must be made. Senator Tom Coburn, one of the few leaders who has been actively campaigning for real structural change, questioned this week whether any agreement could be reached to set our country on the path back to sustainability. His op-ed in yesterday's Washington Post makes it clear that the Senate has no intention of pursuing the difficult decisions necessary to avoid fiscal calamity:
The lack of leadership and initiative in the Senate is appalling. As of this week, the Senate has held just 72 roll call votes this year, about one per legislative day on mostly noncontroversial and inconsequential matters. By this time last year, we had taken more than twice that number of votes (152). By this time in 2009, we had taken 192 votes. If we continue to avoid tough choices, we will lose control of our economic destiny and go down in history as the Senate that lost America. Our epitaph will read: Never before in the field of legislating was so much ignored by so many for so long.
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As the Senate majority leader, Harry Reid bears special responsibility for failing to direct attention to the central challenges of our time. His floor strategy seems to be focused on saving Democrats more than democracy. I would relish a debate on tax earmarks, spending cuts and competing budgets (if there were competing budgets), yet the votes he seems most interested in scheduling—such as tax breaks for big oil companies—are designed for short-term political gain rather than long-term deficit reduction.
Senate leadership is stonewalling. They would rather risk our country falling apart than cut wasteful spending and find commonsense entitlement reforms that will prevent our country from going bankrupt.
I did not run for Senate so I could go to Washington and toe the line. I'm the candidate who has made tough choices in both the private and public sectors, and I'm determined to do the same in the U.S. Senate. I know how to bring both sides to the table, and I understand the urgency of meaningful action. As Senator Coburn explains:
History has not been kind to republics that pretend they can borrow and spend beyond their means indefinitely. We can cheat history, but only if we act quickly. If senators put our national security ahead of our political security, the American people will see there is no problem we cannot solve. Let the debate begin.
He's exactly right. Reining in our debt is no doubt a matter of national security, and we need leaders who will "put our national security ahead of our political security." We must act now.