"I think that we have a responsibility to make certain that we are fiscally responsible in order to assure, frankly, future generations don't have to pay our bills"
About this Quote
Fiscal responsibility is one of those phrases that sounds like common sense until you notice how expertly it dodges the question: responsible to whom, and for what? Carol Moseley Braun frames the issue as an intergenerational moral contract, not a partisan budget fight. By invoking “future generations,” she borrows the emotional authority of parenthood and stewardship, shifting fiscal policy from spreadsheets to ethics. It’s a classic political move: elevate the stakes, simplify the moral terrain, and make dissent feel faintly selfish.
The subtext is equally strategic. “Make certain” signals competence and managerial seriousness, the kind of language politicians reach for when they want to look like adults in a room full of ideological arsonists. The small, telling hedge - “frankly” - functions like a wink: she’s acknowledging a hard truth everyone’s supposed to have been avoiding, even though the line itself is a familiar refrain. It’s candor as performance, a way to claim moral clarity without naming the painful specifics (tax increases, spending cuts, or the politically radioactive reality that today’s “bills” include investments many voters actually like).
Context matters: Braun, as a Democratic senator in the 1990s and later a national figure, operated in an era when “deficits” became a cultural shorthand for governmental virtue or vice. Her phrasing tries to occupy the narrow bridge between progressive aims and centrist credibility, suggesting that caring about social outcomes and caring about balance sheets are not mutually exclusive. The rhetoric works because it turns an abstract fiscal debate into a story about inheritance - and about shame.
The subtext is equally strategic. “Make certain” signals competence and managerial seriousness, the kind of language politicians reach for when they want to look like adults in a room full of ideological arsonists. The small, telling hedge - “frankly” - functions like a wink: she’s acknowledging a hard truth everyone’s supposed to have been avoiding, even though the line itself is a familiar refrain. It’s candor as performance, a way to claim moral clarity without naming the painful specifics (tax increases, spending cuts, or the politically radioactive reality that today’s “bills” include investments many voters actually like).
Context matters: Braun, as a Democratic senator in the 1990s and later a national figure, operated in an era when “deficits” became a cultural shorthand for governmental virtue or vice. Her phrasing tries to occupy the narrow bridge between progressive aims and centrist credibility, suggesting that caring about social outcomes and caring about balance sheets are not mutually exclusive. The rhetoric works because it turns an abstract fiscal debate into a story about inheritance - and about shame.
Quote Details
| Topic | Money |
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