President Obama said he had not given up hope on averting a government shutdown even as Congress appeared no closer to reaching a budget compromise Monday afternoon when the Senate gavelled back into session.
The president said that he was “not at all resigned” to a shutdown at midnight and that he planned to meet with congressional leaders from both parties on Monday as well as during the rest of the week.
Congress has two responsibilities: to “pass a budget and pay the bills,” the president said after a scheduled meeting with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu at the White House.
“If you set aside the short-term politics and look at a long-term deal, it simply requires everyone to act for the American people,” he added.
Lawmakers are mired in a stalemate after the Republican-controlled House passed a bill to fund the government through mid-December and delay Obama’s Affordable Care Act for a year. The Obama administration and the Democrat-led Senate have vowed to reject such a bill, and ripped Republicans for taking the entire federal government hostage in an attempt to defund a three-year-old law that even John Roberts has upheld as constitutional.
Just after 2 p.m. the Senate voted on a party-line 54-46 vote to strip the House provision to delay Obamacare, a move that inches the government even closer to a shutdown. The bill now gets kicked back to the House.
If Congress can’t hammer out a deal, it will be the first time since 1995 that the government shut down.
White House Press Secretary Jay Carney said at a press briefing on Monday afternoon that Obama is eager to compromise and find a “common sense” solution to keeping the government open but he won’t deal with “blatant extortion” as is the case with the House’s attempt to derail Obamacare.









