Mainstream media Sunday shows gave scant coverage Sunday morning to a major peril facing the U.S. economy — the potential for the U.S. government to default on debt payments if Republicans continue to block the raising of the debt ceiling. And when they did cover it, it was all too often treated in a way that took Republican hypocrisy on the issue for granted.
The Washington Post has previously reported on the potential economic consequences of a default: “Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody’s Analytics, found that a prolonged impasse over the debt ceiling would cost the U.S. economy up to 6 million jobs, wipe out as much as $15 trillion in household wealth, and send the unemployment rate surging to roughly 9 percent from around 5 percent.”
Republicans are threatening to use the filibuster to impose a 60-vote threshold, thus hindering the Democratic majority in Congress from being able to avert a default on U.S. debt. Mainstream media outlets have been treating the potential U.S. debt default as “good news” or an “opportunity” for the very Republicans who are provoking the crisis — or chalking it up to “congressional dysfunction” and a problem for the Biden administration to solve.
This conventional wisdom was on full display Sunday morning, during a panel discussion on CNN’s Inside Politics. Politico’s congressional bureau co-chief Burgess Everett said, for example: “Part of the problem, at least for Democrats, is that the debt limit deadline is a little bit later in October. So, if they want Republicans to feel the heat, they're not feeling it right now.”
He then predicted that a vote on a government funding bill and debt limit increase would fail on Monday — with Republican intransigence posing a problem for Democrats: “Then there’s going to be a mad scramble to keep the government open. The risk to doing that is that Republicans may not change their mind, which increases the prospects of a default, and you kind of hamstring the rest of your agenda if you’re constantly doing these short-term spending bills to keep the government open.”
Guest anchor Manu Raju, CNN’s chief congressional correspondent, very nearly got the actual point about McConnell’s hypocrisy — before the show pivoted back to the typical both-sides narrative, while falsely elevating McConnell’s talking points.
The show replayed a clip of McConnell saying that “America must never default” and telling Democrats “don't play Russian roulette with our economy. Step up and raise the debt ceiling.”
“Of course, the same could be said about him. Democrats say he needs to provide the votes,” Raju commented — then describing the ongoing situation as “this game of chicken the two parties are playing.”
Meanwhile, CNN uncritically displayed a chyron: “McConnell: ‘Don’t play Russian roulette’ with debt ceiling.”