WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Whether or not the "fiscal
cliff" impasse is broken before the New Year's Eve deadline, there will
be no post-cliff peace in Washington.
With the political climate toxic in Congress
as the cliff's steep tax hikes and spending cuts approach, other
partisan fights loom, all over the issue that has paralyzed the capital
for the past two years: federal spending.
The first will come in late February when the Treasury Department runs out of borrowing authority and has to come to Congress to get the debt ceiling raised.
The next is likely
in late March, when a temporary bill to fund the government runs out,
confronting Congress with a deadline to act or face a government shutdown. The third will possibly be whenever the temporary bill replacing the temporary bill expires.
While Congress is
supposed to pass annual spending bills before the start of each fiscal
year, it has failed to complete that process since 1996, resorting to
stopgap funding ever since.
Influential anti-tax activist Grover Norquist
predicted in an interview with Reuters that conservatives would wage
repeated battles with President Barack Obama to demand budget savings
every time the government needs a temporary funding bill or more
borrowing capacity.
The so-called "continuing resolutions" to which a
divided Congress has increasingly resorted to keep the government
operating, provide a "very powerful tool" to pry out spending cuts, said
Norquist, president of Americans for Tax Reform.
Republican Senator Bob Corker
of Tennessee said he will not be satisfied until there are substantial
cuts to federal retirement and healthcare benefits known as
entitlements, producing savings in the $4.5 trillion to $5 trillion
range.
"Unfortunately for America," said Corker, "the next line in the sand will be the debt ceiling."Most observers see the $16.4 trillion debt limit as the true fiscal cliff in the new year because if not increased, it would eventually lead to a default on U.S. Treasury debt, an event that could prove cataclysmic for financial markets.
The Treasury
Department said on Wednesday it would start taking extraordinary
measures by December 31 to extend its borrowing capacity for about two
more months.
'POISONOUS CLIMATE'
It was a deadlock
over raising the debt ceiling in August 2011 that prompted a deficit
reduction deal that led to a key fiscal cliff component, the $109
billion in automatic spending cuts on military and domestic programs.
If the fiscal
cliff's spending cuts or tax increases are left even partly unresolved
on December 31, the political combat over them will carry over into the
new Congress, possibly simultaneously with the debt ceiling debate.
"We would be
pessimistic of a quick fix" if the deadline is missed, Sean West, head
U.S. analyst at Eurasia Group, a political risk consultancy, said in a
note to clients. "The political climate will be poisoned. The new
Congress will need time to settle in."
"We are concluding
one of the most unsuccessful Congresses in history," Democratic
Representative John Dingell of Michigan declared in a statement on
Saturday, "noteworthy not only for its failure to accomplish anything of
importance, but also for the poisonous climate of the institution."
Dingell, 86, is the longest serving member of the House, elected first in 1955.
Historically,
bitter struggles in Congress like that over the fiscal cliff lead to
further resentment and strife in a cycle of cumulative grudges that now
spans nearly 30 years.
Many analysts and
lobbyists in Washington believe the strife could get even worse because
the new Congress convening on January 3 will include fewer members from
moderate or swing districts and more from districts tilted heavily to
the left or the right.
Republicans in
particular are likely to face their most serious re-election challenges
in 2014 not from Democrats but from conservative Republicans challenging
them in primary elections.
"Ironically," said a
post-election analysis published by the law firm Patton Boggs, "the
voters have elected a 113th Congress that may be even more partisan than the 112th."
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