WASHINGTON — I do not know about you, but to me this
sequestration imbroglio is getting interesting. Last week I wrote
of my surprise that a basic untruth was being repeated over and
over again by the White House, to wit, that the Republicans were
responsible for the monstrosity of sequestration. I wrote that as I
recalled it sequestration was an idea introduced by the White House
to coax the Republicans and the Democrats into a deal in the summer
of 2011 to raise the ceiling on the national debt. Remember that
deal? And another thing, there would be no tax increase. President
Barack Obama himself endorsed the 2011 idea of sequestration before
claiming in his third debate with Mitt Romney that “The sequester
is not something that I proposed.” And he went on, “It is something
that the Congress proposed.” Really?
Recently most news stories that I read laid sequestration to the
White House as part of the 2011 debt ceiling deal. Then Bob
Woodward weighed in and made it obvious. He had written a book
about the deal and if he remained silent he would have appeared to
have lied in his book. Said Woodward, “My extensive reporting for
my book, The Price of Politics, shows the automatic
spending cuts [sequestration] were initiated by the White House and
were the brainchild of [Jack] Lew [at the time White House chief of
staff and now secretary of the treasury] and White House
congressional relations chief Rob Nabors…” “Obama,” Woodward added,
“personally approved of the plan for Lew and Nabors to propose the
sequester to Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid.” And Woodward gets
technical, “They did it at 2:30 p.m. July 27, 2011, according to
interviews with two senior White House aides who were directly
involved.”
He called this effort to blame sequestration on the Republicans
“partisan message management.” To me it is a blatant lie. After
all, practically everyone who has written about the debt ceiling
deal and now sequestration knows it is a lie or at least a
deceit.
As the inimitable James Taranto has painstakingly chronicled in
the Wall Street Journal’s “Best of the Web Today,” all
hell broke out after Woodward’s statement. Jay Carney, the
President’s press secretary, tweeted that Woodward was “willfully
wrong.” Apparently the press secretary does not know that Woodward
already deposited his findings in a book whose veracity has
heretofore not been questioned. Obama’s political aide David
Plouffé got personal, alluding to Woodward’s age. Woodward is
nearing 70, though the issue is not his age but the integrity of
his reporting and, by the way, Plouffé is no paragon of virility.
Then White House economic advisor Gene Sperling exchanged barbs
with Woodward in a heated exchange.
Actually the only question is, “What did Woodward say in his
book?” Was it accurate then? It appears that what he said was
accurate. The President and the rest of his White House staff have
been lying about sequestration for months. Finally, on Meet the
Press, Sperling admitted as much when he said after much
equivocation that “we put forth the design of” sequestration. Why
did he not say that in the first place?
Things are going to get more interesting. For months, the
President has been talking as though sequestration has to be very
painful and very ugly. Now the government is closing the White
House for tours because of sequestration. There will be other showy
demonstrations of these painful cuts. But the cuts need not be so
painful in a $3.8 trillion dollar budget.
The greater problem is that practically everything the President
says has to be verified. He seems as Woodward says to forever
engage in “partisan message management.” Soon the country will
catch on. There is no dealing with a partisan message manager.
Photo: UPI