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GOP said Congress would cut spending. Rep. Massie on how it broke down.

It’s impossible to look at Rep. Thomas Massie of Kentucky without thinking about the national debt. And that’s by design.

The MIT engineer wrote 1,000 lines of code to create the little gadget on his lapel that displays how much the United States owes in real time.  

Why We Wrote This

As Congress rushes to pass a $1.2 trillion spending bill negotiated largely behind closed doors, Rep. Thomas Massie provides a heterodox perspective on what’s wrong with the process – and how it could be fixed.

The national debt is at a record high of nearly $34.6 trillion. And today, the GOP-run House authorized the government to spend another $1.2 trillion. As Washington concludes yet another budget cycle with a pricey, rushed bill that was negotiated largely behind closed doors, Mr. Massie reflects on how the GOP set out to do things differently 15 months ago, and where it all broke down.

It wasn’t supposed to be this way.

When Republicans won back the House in 2022, they vowed to develop the 12 required spending bills individually so government funding could be better scrutinized. Then-Speaker Kevin McCarthy agreed to mandate a 72-hour review period for legislation and to lower the threshold for the “motion to vacate.’’

Instead, the 12 appropriation bills have been crammed into two big bills, the second of which must be passed by midnight tonight, or much of the federal government will shut down. And the 72-hour rule was broken.

It’s impossible to look at Rep. Thomas Massie of Kentucky without thinking about the national debt. And that’s by design.

The MIT engineer put in three 15-hour days writing 1,000 lines of code to create the little gadget clipped to his lapel. In numbers reminiscent of a gas station pump – in a font he designed pixel by pixel – it displays just how much the United States owes now…. And now…. And now.

The orange digits at the end whir so fast they’re blurry. In the hour-plus we spent talking in the ornate Speaker’s Lobby this week, the United States descended $350 million deeper into the red. 

Why We Wrote This

As Congress rushes to pass a $1.2 trillion spending bill negotiated largely behind closed doors, Rep. Thomas Massie provides a heterodox perspective on what’s wrong with the process – and how it could be fixed.

The national debt is now at a record high of nearly $34.6 trillion. And today, the GOP-run House authorized the government to spend another $1.2 trillion that it doesn’t have. Meanwhile Mr. Massie, a Kentucky libertarian who voted “no” on today’s funding bill, has learned a thing or two about what works – and doesn’t work – to rein in spending since he rode the Tea Party wave to Congress a dozen years ago.

As Washington concludes yet another budget cycle with a pricey, rushed bill that was negotiated largely behind closed doors, he reflects on how the GOP set out to do things differently 15 months ago, and where it all broke down.

An inventor turned cattle farmer who built his off-the-grid homestead with logs from his property, Mr. Massie stood out from the start for his willingness to go against the grain. He challenged his own party. He wrote the motion that in 2015 pushed out GOP Speaker John Boehner, who ran afoul of hardline conservatives. He flouted longstanding norms, earning monikers from “anarchist” to “the most hated man in Washington,” when he forced all of Congress to return to Washington in the early days of the pandemic to vote in person on a $2.2 trillion stimulus package.

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