Mitch McConnell to states: Drop dead. Andrew Cuomo responds.

Some men, as Batman's butler Alfred famously said, "can't be bought, bullied, reasoned or negotiated with. Some men just want to watch the world burn."

Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) may be among them.

While it's awfully hard to be surprised by the depths of the Senate majority leader's cynicism, on Wednesday he gave a truly remarkable interview to conservative radio host Hugh Hewitt in which the subject of aid to states and localities came up in a discussion of the rescue packages that Congress has passed.

The Senate majority leader made clear that he does not want to see any more aid to states and localities from this point on. Instead, he believes that they should simply be forced to declare bankruptcy. He said:

My guess is their first choice would be for the federal government to borrow money from future generations to send it down to them now so they don't have to do that [declare bankruptcy. That's not something I'm going to be in favor of....We all have governors regardless of party who would love to have free money. And that's why I said yesterday we're going to push the pause button here, because I think this whole business of additional assistance for state and local governments need to be thoroughly evaluated.

Meanwhile, his office is calling aid to states "Blue State Bailouts" — as though it's only states with lots of Democrats that need help to avoid having to lay off teachers and cops, and not every state in the Union.

The twin public health and economic crises have put state budgets in a desperate condition. If something isn't done soon, those budgets are going to collapse, resulting in massive layoffs and cuts in services (as of 2014, there were more than 16 million state and local full-time-equivalent employees in America). Which, of course, will make the recession deeper and longer.

While Phase 3 of the rescue effort included $150 billion for states and localities, it wasn't nearly enough. In the negotiations over Phase 4, Democrats requested an additional $150 billion, but even that represented a fraction of the need. According to experts and groups like the National Governors Association, states actually need more like $500 billion to stay afloat.

As those negotiations proceeded, the position of the Trump White House came down to, "We'll get to that later." According to some reporting, they were privately worried that giving the states aid too soon would discourage them from quickly reopening businesses and schools; better to use some more economic pain as a way to incentivize them to lift stay-at-home orders, regardless of what public health might dictate.

But McConnell didn't say he might favor state and local aid some time in the future. He simply said no, so there was no state aid in Phase 4. And now it's becoming clear that "No" really meant "Never."

In any negotiation, the party that is more willing to walk away has most of the power. If you desperately want to arrive at an agreement but I don't really care one way or another, you're going to be much more willing to accept my terms.

We've seen that play out in negotiations over the successive phases of economic rescue since the covid-19 pandemic began — except with an inversion of what one might expect. Since the president is likely to get most of the blame (deserved or not) for an economic downturn, and since President Trump is up for reelection this fall, Republicans should be the ones demanding the most aggressive measures to confront the pandemic and save the economy.

Yet the opposite has been true: Democrats have asked for more at every step than Republicans have been willing to give, to the point where in Phase 4, the inclusion of $25 billion for coronavirus testing — the single most important thing that will allow us to end the pandemic — was treated by everyone as a concession Republicans made to Democrats.

But even if his public rejection of state aid were just a negotiating tactic on McConnell's part, the natural question is: To what end? What would making everyone think he's willing to turn a recession into a depression achieve for McConnell? What is he trying to get out of the next deal that he can't otherwise get? Less money for small businesses? Less help for the unemployed?

Rep. John Yarmuth (D-Ky.), who has known McConnell for half a century, recently told the New Yorker's Jane Mayer that McConnell "never had any core principles. He just wants to be something. He doesn't want to do anything."

Maybe McConnell secretly has some end game in mind, one that will suddenly reveal that he was serving the best interests of all Americans the whole time. But right now, it sure looks like he just wants the country to burn.

Paul Waldman, Washington Post, April 22, 2020

The Governor of New York responded to McConnell. Here is the Daily News coverage.

McConnell says no 'blue state' coronavirus bailouts, effectively telling New York to drop dead

By MICHAEL MCAULIFF and CHRIS SOMMERFELDT NEW YORK DAILY NEWSAPR 22, 2020 |6:19 PM

Mitch McConnell is effectively telling New York and other coronavirus-stricken states to drop dead.

The iron-fisted Senate majority leader announced Wednesday that his Republican caucus won't support federal bailouts for New York and other states under enormous economic pressure because of the coronavirus pandemic, drawing harsh backlash from both sides of the aisle.

"My guess is their first choice would be for the federal government to borrow money from future generations to send it down to them now so they don't have to do that. That's not something I'm going to be in favor of," McConnell (R-Ky.) said of hard-hit states like New York during an interview on Hugh Hewitt's right-wing radio show.

Instead, McConnell suggested Congress could tinker with Chapter 9 laws so states can restructure their mounting debts by declaring bankruptcy — an option that's currently only available to cities and local governments.

"I would certainly be in favor of allowing states to use the bankruptcy route," he said.

The Kentucky senator added later in the interview, "There's not going to be any desire on the Republican side to bail out state pensions by borrowing money from future generations."

Gov. Cuomo has pleaded for a federal bailout for weeks and says New York could suffer a $15 billion revenue shortfall because of the pandemic, with businesses shuttered and hundreds of thousands of Empire State residents forced into unemployment.

The governor did not mince words when asked about McConnell's comments during an afternoon appearance on WAMC.

"That is one of the saddest, really dumb comments of all time," the governor said. "OK, let's have all the states declare bankruptcy ... That's how you want to reopen by bankrupting the states? I mean, it's just a really dumb statement."

New York Rep. Max Rose, who recently wrapped up a National Guard deployment to help out with coronavirus response on his native Staten Island, dared McConnell to come to his neck of the woods.

"I want to take him to the police precincts in my district on Staten Island, in South Brooklyn to meet the cops, I want to take him to the firehouses, I want to take him to meet the nurses, I want to take him to meet the bus drivers, I want to take him to meet the sanitation workers — everybody who's out there putting their neck on the line right now ... and have him tell them to drop dead to their face," Rose told the Daily News.

The fuming Staten Island Democrat added, "The only type of person who would do or say something like this is a piece of human trash. I have no doubt in my mind."

Underscoring the partisan nature of his remarks, McConnell's office released a transcript of the Hewitt interview in which his comments about bailouts were placed under a subhead reading "On Stopping Blue State Bailouts."

McConnell's remarks carried unmistakable echoes of President Gerald Ford's infamous threat in 1975 to veto any federal bailout passed by Congress for New York City's then-near bankrupt government. The 38th president's bailout refusal resulted in the Daily News' legendary "Ford to City: Drop Dead" front page.

McConnell's modern-day "drop dead" slight came one day after President Trump vowed that he, for one, would support including state bailouts in the next economic stimulus package being worked on by Congress.

At least one Republican member of Congress did not take kindly to McConnell's bailout blather.

"McConnell's dismissive remark that states devastated by coronavirus should go bankrupt rather than get the federal assistance they need and deserve is shameful and indefensible," tweeted Long Island Rep. Pete King, who's retiring at the end of this term. "To say that it is 'free money' to provide funds for cops, firefighters and healthcare workers makes McConnell the Marie Antoinette of the Senate."

McConnell's chamber passed a $484 billion coronavirus package Tuesday that includes emergency funds for small businesses, hospitals and increased COVID-19 testing capacities.

Democrats argued that the package should've included bailouts for hard-hit state governments as well, but McConnell and his Republican majority stood firm. The House is expected to consider the Senate-approved bill Thursday.

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Voices4America Post Script.

Vote #MoscowMitch McConnell out KY. We need leaders who care about America and American workers, police, carers, lives. We are #NotBlueNotRed. We are Americans. Pass this along. #RememberToday #RememberinNovember


Here is some more important information.

1. Under current laws, states do not have the ability to declare bankruptcy.

2. On Tuesday, the National Governors Association, a bi-partisan group, sent a letter to McConnell and other congressional leaders saying state's needed Congress to approve an additional $500 billion "in direct federal aid that allows for replacement of lost revenue."




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