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Elon Musk has publicly endorsed Warren Buffett’s decade‑old proposal to bar sitting members of the U.S. Congress from reelection whenever the federal deficit exceeds 3% of GDP, reigniting debate as the national debt approaches $39 trillion.
Musk responded on X to a resurfaced clip of Buffett’s 2011 remark — “I could end the deficit in five minutes” — with comments such as “100%. This is the way.” Prominent investors and officials including Ray Dalio and Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent have signalled support for stricter fiscal rules, while the nonpartisan Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget has warned average interest rates on the debt could outpace growth by 2031.
The U.S. federal debt is roughly $38.9–$39 trillion (about 124% of GDP), with weekly interest costs reported above $22 billion and annual interest exceeding $1 trillion.
Advocates argue automatic political consequences would force fiscal restraint; critics say the idea faces severe constitutional, legal and practical hurdles and could prompt abrupt austerity or political churn.
Some lawmakers have introduced bipartisan measures to target a 3% deficit limit, and Senator Mike Lee has helped reframe the conversation by circulating the clip and drafting related language.
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Commenters largely reframed the deficit-rule debate around the practical consequences of fiscal tightening—fears about USAID cuts, defense spending and no‑bid contracts—and noted factual limits on presidential power to pardon state convictions, challenging claims about a federal pardon.






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