Two Joint Committee structures that could succeed Posted August 3, 2011
   	 	    The Budget Control Act creates a Joint Committee whose goal is  to recommend legislation that will reduce the deficit by $1.8 T over the  next ten years.
   Many are predicting that, like many other special fiscal committees  and commissions before them, this one will deadlock, resulting in  triggered automatic spending cuts in discretionary spending and  Medicare.
   This reasonable prediction results from the structure of the Committee:  - Speaker Boehner and Leaders Pelosi, Reid, and McConnell each appoint  3 Members (of the House or Senate) for a total of 12 on the Committee;
 - you need a majority (7 of 12) to make recommendations.
   Each of the four leaders represents a partisan caucus. Each caucus  has a political center of gravity that leans toward its wing. If “the  other side” can pick off just one of the six appointees of your party,  they can run the table. These factors create an incentive for each  leader to choose reliable Members who are closer to the wing of the  party than the middle, and thereby decrease the chance for a negotiated  agreement.
   I can think of two other structures for a Joint Committee that could  have been written into law and would have a much greater chance of  reaching a solution. There may be others.
   At this point it’s too late to enact a law implementing a new  structure. But since the deficit reduction goal is woefully insufficient  compared to the problem to be solved, there will be additional  opportunities in the future.
   I won’t go so far as to say I am recommending either of these  structures, but if possible I would like at least to inject the ideas  into the public debate.
   A center-out structure - Speaker Boehner and Leaders Pelosi, Reid, and McConnell each get 4  Members (of the House or Senate) for a total of 16 on the Committee;
 - Two of each leader’s selections must be from the other party;
 - you need a majority (9 of 16) to make recommendations.
   In this structure you might expect Leader McConnell to pick two  reliable conservatives along with Senators Lieberman and Ben Nelson.  (Lieberman is an independent but caucuses with Democrats.) Leader Reid  would likely pick two reliable liberals along with one of the Maine  Republican Senators or maybe one of the Republicans in the Gang of Six.
   This structure would likely result in three rough groupings: a center  of 8, a liberal block of 4, and a conservative block of 4.  With nine  votes needed for a majority it’s easy to imagine several different  winning coalitions. The chance of a majority recommendation would go way  up.
   This structure would be likely to lead to a roughly centrist or at least politically balanced solution...
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