With less than a week before the sequester deadline and no deal in sight to stop painful budget cuts from taking effect March 1, Rep. Marsha Blackburn, R-Tenn., tells msnbc’s Alex Witt it is a circumstance that could have been avoided.
“We didn’t have to be in this situation in the first place,” Rep. Blackburn said Saturday on Weekends with Alex Witt. “If the Senate would have taken up any of the bills we had last year that would have addressed this, and the House passed them, some of them with bipartisan support…they chose not to take them up.”
At the same time, President Obama is putting the blame on congressional Republicans for not getting a deal passed.
“Unfortunately, it appears that Republicans in Congress have decided that instead of compromising, instead of asking anything of the wealthiest Americans, they would rather let these cuts fall squarely on the middle class,” the president said in his weekly address Saturday.
Obama also made phone calls Thursday to House Speaker John Boehner and Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell. But Rep. Blackburn says that is not enough.









