With the deadline for a government shutdown now just 16 hours away, there’s a dirty little secret that hasn’t received as much attention as it deserves: there’s an obvious solution that enjoys the support of the White House, a majority of the Senate, and a majority of the House. It’s not going anywhere, however, because House Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio) is too afraid of the idea.
It came up briefly yesterday on “Meet the Press” when Dee Dee Myers asked Rep. Raul Labrador (R-Idaho) a good question. So what’s the endgame, though, congressman?” Myers said. “Are you willing to vote for a continued resolution that comes back [to the House] that does not delay or defund Obamacare?”
“I am not, but I think there’s enough people in the Republican Party who are willing to do that,” the far-right congressman responded.
And there it is: the obvious resolution. A temporary budget bill (or “continuing resolution”) that keeps current spending levels in place, and leaves the federal health care system alone, has already been approved by the Senate. The White House has said President Obama would sign it. And if it came to the House floor for a vote, it’d probably get a majority there, too, ending the threat of a shutdown.
Indeed, Labrador isn’t the only one who thinks so. Reps. Peter King (R-N.Y.), Charlie Dent (R-Pa.), and Steve Womack (R-Ark.) have all made similar comments in recent days.
So why doesn’t the House GOP leadership just take the obvious step and allow the House to vote on the Senate bill? Boehner may yet do exactly that — like I said, there are still 16 hours to go — but he’s balked up until now because he insists on placating his far-right members.
We’re on the brink of another shutdown, in other words, because Boehner is a weak Speaker who has allowed extremists to push him around — and push us to another Republican-imposed crisis.
There was also this from the Hill yesterday:
House Republicans, who insisted that they had passed a compromise over the weekend that would avoid a shutdown if only the Senate would act, blamed Mr. Reid for purposely running out the clock.
Ah yes, a “compromise.” The House GOP unanimously approved a measure that would strip millions of Americans of their health care benefits for a year, while blocking access to contraception for much of the public. Republicans then told the Senate to pass this or they’d shut down the government — and this is, in their strange minds, a “compromise.”








