Cartoon of the week:
Since the GOP won control of the House 2 years ago they have not passed a single appropriations package into law. Thatâs the primary job of the House of Representatives. Government has operated at funding levels set by Democrats two years ago via passing Continuing Resolutions every few months. This is not normal.
And it continued last week, just in a weirder way. From CNN:
âThe House has voted to pass a stopgap funding bill just hours before a midnight deadline to avert a federal government shutdown. The Senate must next take up the bill. The vote was 366 to 34. Thirty-four Republicans voted against the bill, and one Democrat voted present. The bill would extend government funding into March and includes disaster relief and farming provisions, but does not include a suspension of the debt limit, which President-elect Donald Trump has been demanding Republicans address.â
The Senate passed the measure as expected just after midnight. And Biden signed it.
But, just two days ago, Trump and Musk threatened to ensure a primary challenge for any House Republican who voted for a bill that didnât include a debt limit increase. On Friday, 170 of them took him up on just that.
Musk is now claiming that heâs really fine with all this. But back up two days to this from Robert Hubbell:
 âMusk ordered Republicans not to pass âany billâ until Trump is sworn in on January 20, 2025. If Republicans follow Muskâs command, there will be no government funding for a month (at least)–from Friday, December 20, 2024, through Monday, January 20, 2025. If that happens, chaos will ensue.â
And it got worse. Co-President Trump remained on the sidelines of the budget debate until after Musk tweeted âThis bill should not pass.â Trump then posted a curveball:
 âUnless the Democrats terminate or substantially extend the Debt Ceiling now, I will fight ’till the end.â
The end happened way before the end, though. Increasing the debt ceiling is something that didnât need to be done until June of 2025. But Trump didnât want a debt ceiling increase to happen on his watch. The reason that Trump wanted to force a debt limit increase under Biden is that Trump needs that increase to pay for the proposed extensions of his 2017 tax cuts for millionaires and corporations. From The Hill, Lawmakers caught off guard by Trump debt ceiling demand: (emphasis by Wrongo)
â…Sen. Chris Murphy (D-CT) accused Trump of wanting Democrats âto agree to raise the debt ceiling so he can pass his massive corporate and billionaire tax cut without a problem.â….âShorter version: tax cut for billionaires or the government shuts down for Christmas,â he added.â
The chaos caused by Musk foreshadows a second Trump administration with unelected, unaccountable billionaires mucking about in our politics. What could go wrong? With this kabuki, Hubbell thought this:
- Trump looked like he is subordinate to Musk.
- Musk hasâfor nowâseized momentum from Trump as the dominant political force in the second Trump administration.
- It is difficult to see how Mike Johnson survives as Speaker….Johnson has been humiliated and back-stabbed by Trump and Musk. Mike Johnsonâs credibility with his own caucus and Democratic counterparts is non-existent. And some of that showed in the bill that was passed on Friday.
If youâre looking for a way to combat this, Democrats should publicly embarrass Trump about Musk. Call Musk the President-elect. Or the richer & smarter co-President; the one people really want to talk to. Trump will HATE it and might eventually ‘fire’ Musk. Remember, you canât spell FELON without ELON.
Weâre more than a decade now into the GOPâs performative politics of destruction. It gains power by touting its aim to break stuff and then runs into a brick wall when itâs forced to make the hard choices that come with holding power. Any GOP effort to govern at least temporarily is susceptible to being undermined by its many bomb throwers, now including Musk, who can exert leverage by striking a purer âblow it all upâ posture than the rest of the GOP.
The events of the last week should give us hope that there are limits to the delusional, performative, grandiose claims and threats being peddled by Musk and Trump. They were losers in their first attempt of a smack-down with Congress. The lesson that the deficit hawks in the GOP should take from the tussle is that Trump and Musk are not as tough as they think.
In fact, it may signal the start of Trumpâs âlame duckâ presidency.
Ron Filipkowski of MeidasNews accurately summed up the chaos we now find ourselves in. The question is whether non-elected officials should control funding the US government:
âThe owner of a car company is controlling the House of Representatives from a social media app.â
What does it say about America that Elon Musk had to pay $44 billion to buy control of Twitter, but only $250 million in campaign contributions to Trump to buy control of the U.S. government?
This country is falling apart. Kind of like a Cybertruck.
Musk has to go.