The views expressed by contributors are their own and not the view of The Hill

Simpson-Bowles has bipartisan support

That headline alone is a shocker, since it defies the conventional wisdom (CW) and narrative created by the media and on the Internet.  

We all recognize that the reliance of most people on the Internet to get their news and information — or, worse, TV nightly cable or daily talk show hosts on the left and right — often results in a superficial and often incorrect understanding of what is really happening in the country and in Washington. 

{mosads}In that superficial news-readership culture, it’s no surprise that the general take-away when the name Simpson-Bowles is mentioned, even among the minority of Americans who have actually heard of it, can be summarized in one word: baaaaaad. 

Pain, awful, draconian, too liberal, too conservative, too many cuts, too few cuts, bad higher taxes, bad lower taxes, hitting the “third rails” of Social Security and Medicare cuts, too impractical, it can never pass — all of this has been written and said so many times it is now the commonly understood “truth” about the chances of Simpson-Bowles ever being enacted.

In fact, the evidence is to the contrary. Simpson-Bowles can be enacted, at least most of it, once it is as carefully debated and considered as was done by the 18 members or commissioners during dozens of meetings and hundreds of hours of deliberations, under the brave and honest hands of former Republican Sen. Alan Simpson (Wyo.) and former Clinton Chief of Staff Erskine Bowles, until recently the chancellor of the University of North Carolina. 

The commission’s 18 members were evenly divided, 9-9, between liberal Democrats and conservative Republicans. Yet, remarkably, consider this fact, contrary to the CW — get ready to be shocked: The Simpson-Bowles commission’s recommendations were supported by an overwhelming majority of the commissioners. Indeed, the margin was over 60 percent — enough to kill a Senate filibuster. 

Supporting the recommendations of a combination of tax hikes and spending cuts were such courageous senators as conservative Republicans Mike Crapo (Idaho) and Tom Coburn (Okla.) and liberal Democrats Dick Durbin (Ill.) and Kent Conrad (N.D.). 

Yes, their votes were not necessarily an endorsement of every recommendation and every detail of the 400-plus-page report. But the fact is, the brave 11, including these truly great senators who have the country’s best interests at heart, can lead the way and shame their colleagues into standing up and explaining precisely what they intend to do to reduce our over $14 trillion in debt — or almost $46,000 for each of the 310 million men, women and children in America to pay back. 

But the headlines were mainly that the commission “failed” to achieve the 75 percent necessary to “recommend” the plan to Congress. To put it simply, that is silly. 

Who cares whether the Simpson-Bowles commission “recommended” its proposals to Congress? Congress still has the power — and so does the president — to endorse them and enact them into law. The 75 percent requirement is irrelevant. What is relevant is the need for political courage and determination by Democrats and Republicans, with consistency in principle, whether from the left or right. 

Seen anyone lately who qualifies?

For the next several weeks, barring some significant breaking story that requires commentary, I will be explaining the Simpson-Bowles report and getting into some of the details. 

I will first explain the overall structure of the recommendations — the principle that all has to be done at once, together, not one piece at a time. I will then go into detail on the four parts of the recommendations that must be undertaken together: (1) Social Security cuts phased in over several decades; (2) tax reform, including income tax cuts and gasoline tax hikes; (3) Medicaid/Medicare cuts, forcing the wealthier elderly to pay more and forcing lower-income people into managed-care, lower-cost systems; and (4) discretionary spending cuts, across the board — from earmarks to defense to programs broadly benefiting the middle class.  

This is the Purple Nation moment. It’s time for everyone who cares about the future of our country, of our children and grandchildren, on the left and right, to join hands and say one word: Enough. 

Stay tuned.

Davis, the principal in the Washington law firm of Lanny J. Davis & Associates, which also specializes in legal crisis management, served as President Clinton’s special counsel from 1996-98 and as a member of President George W. Bush’s Privacy and Civil Liberties Oversight Board.  He is the author of the book Scandal: How ‘Gotcha’ Politics Is Destroying America.

Tags Dick Durbin Mike Crapo Tom Coburn

Copyright 2023 Nexstar Media Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.