Reality Check wrote:
I think the people calling for Obama to invoke the 14th Amendment were idealistic. There was too much downside potential. It would have gone to SCOTUS and a loss would have been devastating. Obama would then have had to go back to the table with the US in default and no bargaining power.
SCOTUS sometimes makes a vastly unpopular choice but rarely one in which they would be actually flushing the economy down the toilet with 80 percent of the population opposed. When they make such a decision, generally it is either somewhat against the trend, with a growing minority supporting something (striking down sodomy laws or laws against interracial marriage), or against the trend in the opposite direction, when a majority supports something which is, in actuality, an expansion of government power (Lochner Era cases).
Not even in the Lochner Era has the Supreme Court made a decision that literally would throw the country off a cliff with immediate effect. They might get four for such a decision (I think either Alito or Roberts would side with the executive), but no way does a pragmatist like Kennedy go along with that.
Even a loss would have to be 5-4, along partisan lines, and would have to be narrowly and deferentially worded to get Kennedy aboard. It would also probably be prospective in effect, as SCOTUS would be entirely powerless to un-spend the money, in which third parties would by then have vested property rights, or to order Congress to enact legislation or to impeach the President. What could they reasonably do?
This is just not the kind of thing even a partisan SCOTUS does.
The right branch to address such an actual usurpation by the President (since my personal opinion is that unilaterally raising the debt ceiling actually
is unconstitutional) is Congress. They could impeach or STFU. What they'd actually do is blame the President, very likely ratify his actions after the fact to retain the illusion that they have the power, and keep spending.
Obviously, IMO.
There was no need to cut this "deal" to stop the default. If the downgrade was inevitable, though, as many seem to think, there was no reason to sign a "deal" that wouldn't stop it, and that accomplishes nothing but screwing over America.
Interestingly, some on the left are claiming that Obama actually
intended this horrible outcome. I'm not yet inclined to view the President as an outright villain, though.
Oh, well. This "deal" at least doesn't preclude something better after the election, but a Republican may very well be at the helm. The short-term economic devastation that will happen as a result of Obama's failure to lead will be at its height during election season, an outcome I am sure the Republicans intended. Obama was led down a primrose path to the slaughterhouse.