As the country shuffles into week two of the government shutdown, not much has changed in the 160-plus hours since a number of government agencies and services ground to a halt. The House and Senate seem no closer to finding a long-term–or even temporary–budget resolution, and to top it off, the U.S. is just 10 days away from entering into default unless Congress can agree to a debt-ceiling increase.
Much of the showdown, of course, is a result of House Republicans quixotically rallying around a plan to delay or defund President Obama’s healthcare law. The president has said that he was willing to negotiate with the GOP, but that the government must reopen first. Obama has called for a debt-limit increase without any conditions, but GOP leaders have refused to budge unless specific spending reductions are put in play in exchange for a debt-limit hike.
As week two begins, here are a few tactics that conservatives might employ this week.
1. Boehner will continue to declare he doesn’t have enough votes
House Speaker John Boehner said this weekend he did not have enough votes in the lower chamber of Congress to pass a continuing resolution to fund the government without the provision to delay or defund Obamacare. Yet, by several counts and due to a number of House Republicans willing to pass it, there do seem to be enough votes to greenlight a so-called “clean” resolution in the House. President Obama has criticized Boehner for cowering to the Tea Party and urged the House to simply “Take a vote.”
2. GOP: We are putting options on the table!
Republicans are putting forth piecemeal budget votes in an attempt to offer symbolic funding to public services like the National Weather Service, the Federal Emergency Management Agency, and child nutrition and development programs. But Democrats see the moves as gimmicks merely to shift blame away from the GOP. The Senate has already vowed to block such measures, asking instead for a plan to fund the entire government at sequester levels.
3. GOP: The Dems are being stubborn, not us!
Republicans will likely try to continue to hammer the message that it’s the Democrats’ fault for refusing to negotiate. Boehner on Sunday warned on ABC’s This Week that the nation is headed toward default, saying “That’s the path we’re on.” He said to end it, all Obama has to do is start negotiating. “He knows what my phone number is. All he has to do is call.” If only it were that easy.









