Toggle Menu

The Breakdown: Will the Tea Party Stall the Economy?

The Center for Economic and Policy Research's Dean Baker joins Christopher Hayes to answer the question: if Tea Party freshmen vote to not raise our debt ceiling as they vowed to do on the campaign trail, will government grind to a halt and bring the US economy down with it?

Chris Hayes

November 5, 2010

Your browser doesn’t support HTML5 audio

In the wake of Tuesday's election, citizens across the country are trying to predict how Congress's drastic shift to the right will play out in terms of jobs, public funding and the economy in general. Mainly, Americans want to know, what happens when the anti-Washingtonians get to Washington? On this week's episode of The Breakdown, co-director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research Dean Baker joins Nation DC Editor Chris Hayes to answer the question: if Tea Party freshmen vote to not raise our debt ceiling as they vowed to do on the campaign trail, will government grind to a halt and bring the US economy down with it?

In the wake of Tuesday’s election, people across the country are trying to predict how Congress’s rightward shift will play out in terms of jobs, public funding and the economy. Mainly, Americans want to know, what happens when the anti-Washingtonians get to Washington? On this week’s episode of The Breakdown, co-director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research Dean Baker joins Nation DC Editor Chris Hayes to answer the question: if Tea Party freshmen vote not to  raise our debt ceiling—as they vowed to do on the campaign trail—will government grind to a halt and bring the US economy down with it?
Related Links

Dean Baker’s blog, Beat the Press. Baker’s column with the Guardian. Congress.org article on potential clash between the GOP and Tea Party freshmen on the debt ceiling.

Subscribe to The Breakdown on iTunes to listen to fresh takes on the confusing concepts that make politics, economics and government tick. A new episode every week!

Chris HayesTwitterChris Hayes is the Editor-at-Large of The Nation and host of “All In with Chris Hayes” on MSNBC.


Latest from the nation