Republican Rep. Paul Ryan is finally speaking out about the government shutdown stalemate. But there’s one major problem, according to his fellow GOPers: There’s no mention of Obamacare.
In a Wall Street Journal op-ed, the chairman of the House Budget Committee and failed vice presidential nominee says in order to put the political drama to rest Democrats and Republicans should focus on “modest reforms to entitlement programs and the tax code.”
Ryan primarily proposes trading entitlement reforms for a repeal of the sequester cuts.
“For my Democratic colleagues, the discretionary spending levels in the Budget Control Act are a major concern. And the truth is, there’s a better way to cut spending. We could provide relief from the discretionary spending levels in the Budget Control Act in exchange for structural reforms to entitlement programs,” the Wisconsin lawmaker writes.
Conservative critics immediately jumped over the fact that Ryan failed to even mention Obama’s health care act, a major sticking point for many House Republicans who are quixotically rallying around a plan to delay or defund Obamacare. Ryan, whose name has been floated as a possible 2016 contender for the Republican presidential nomination, has been largely silent throughout the shutdown battle despite making a name for himself as the brains behind the GOP budget platform.
Dan Holler, the communications director for the Heritage Foundation, tweeted “Much like White House press, Paul Ryan doesn’t mention Obamacare in WSJ oped”









