Caving to the party’s conservative wing, Speaker John Boehner said Wednesday that House Republicans will risk a government shutdown in their ongoing push to defund Obamacare—an effort that remains almost certainly doomed to fail.
Speaking at a Capitol Hill press conference after a closed-door meeting with his conference, Boehner said Republican leaders plan to vote this week on a measure authored by Rep. Tom Graves of Georgia, a Tea Party favorite, that would keep the government funded beyond the end of the month, while removing funding for the healthcare law.
“We’re going to do everything to repeal the healthcare law,” Boehner said. “We’re going to pass a [continuing resolution] that will defund Obamacare.”
The government will shut down on Oct. 1 unless lawmakers can come to an agreement to keep it funded beyond then.
Graves has said that some 70 House Republicans—a significant bloc of the 233 total members of the House GOP caucus—have signed on as co-sponsors. But GOP leaders had until now resisted the Graves strategy, pointing out that it won’t succeed in stopping Obamacare, which was signed into law over three years ago. That’s because any measure that strips out funding for the law would be rejected by the Democratic-controlled Senate—and the White House has promised a veto in any case.
Still, for Boehner, passing the Graves plan now would at least temporarily take the heat off, and allow him to say the House had done its part in the push to defund Obamacare. That would then put the burden on Senate conservatives like Ted Cruz and Mike Lee, leaders of the anti-Obamacare campaign, who have lately been pointing fingers at the House.
“The fight over here has been won,” Boehner said. “The House has voted 40 times to repeal Obamacare. Time for the Senate to do same.”
But it wouldn’t solve the problem of how to keep the government running past the end of this month. To do that, House Republican leaders would have to propose a new continuing resolution that both funds the government and keeps Obamacare in tact.









