We have a sense of how the budget standoff is supposed to go this week. The Democratic-led Senate will strip the House bill of its “defund Obamacare” provisions, leave the rest of it intact, pass it, and send it back to the lower chamber for an up-or-down vote. If the House passes it, we move on to the next GOP-imposed crisis. If the House rejects it, the government shuts down.
But there’s another scenario to consider. We talked a bit late on Friday about an alternative scenario in which Democrats play budget hardball, and help the country at the same time. The idea has some notable allies on Capitol Hill.
Senate Democrats … say Reid should counter the House Republican government funding bill by not only stripping language defunding ObamaCare, but by increasing funding for the rest of the government.
Democrats say Reid can afford to go on offense against Republicans given their division, and polls that show most voters would blame them if the government shuts down.
“We’re going to try to get as high a CR level as we can get,” said Sen. Charles Schumer (N.Y.), the third-ranking member of the Democratic caucus, referring to the stop-gap spending measure. “We are not going to be held hostage…. We’re going to negotiate to get as a high a level as possible.”
With just one week until the shutdown deadline, it’s understandable that nearly all of the attention has been focused on Republican efforts to sabotage the Affordable Care Act. Indeed, the GOP’s tactics have been indefensible — they’re threatening to shut down the federal government unless Democrats agree to take away health care benefits from millions of Americans. It’s just bizarre.
But let’s not overlook the other part of this: spending levels. The House Republicans’ bill leaves spending levels where they are now — keeping the damaging sequestration levels intact for no particular reason.
Democrats could, if they wanted to adopt a slightly more aggressive posture, do something about this.
To review the alternative scenario we discussed on Friday, Senate Dems are already going to change the House bill — by majority rule, they’ll scrap the part that defunds the Affordable Care Act. But why stop there? Senate Democratic leaders could, simultaneously, approve higher spending levels, ending some or all of the sequestration policy that’s hurting the country for no reason.
Even if Senate Republicans balked, there’s not a whole lot they could do about it. And since plenty of GOP senators hate the deliberately harmful sequester anyway, maybe some of them might even be glad.









