For all the scuttlebutt about a Senate agreement this afternoon, negotiators had not — and have not — resolved major issues such as the automatic spending cuts in sequestration, suggesting much of the relief was wildly premature. There’s still a very real chance the ongoing negotiations will simply fail.
But there was another lingering question for which there was no answer: even if the Senate crafted a deal, could it pass the House? It appears we won’t find out until after the clock runs out.
Awaiting action by the Senate, the leaders of the House of Representatives have announced they will stage no votes this evening, ensuring the nation will go over the fiscal cliff for at least a day.
“We don’t have anything to vote on before midnight,” tweeted Brendan Buck, a spokesman for House Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio). “The House will take action after the Senate passes something.”
This seems to have caused quite a stir for many in the media, but I’d caution against a freak-out. Indeed, this isn’t even that big a surprise — the Washington Post reported 12 hours ago that the House members “may push to delay a vote until Tuesday,” and with “U.S. financial markets closed for the New Year’s holiday,” it’s likely the effects would be quite limited.
Besides, while I’m generally not in the habit of defending the Boehner-led House, I’d also point out that the lower chamber has nothing to vote on. We’re about seven hours from midnight, and there is no Senate agreement, no sense of when there might be an agreement, no sense of when the Senate might vote on a possible agreement, and no certainty that the still-incomplete agreement would earn the Senate’s approval anyway. It’s tough to blame House leaders for failing to schedule a vote on a bill that, at this point, doesn’t exist.
And then there’s that other factor: as of 12:01 a.m., the House gets to work with a new baseline — and you’d be surprised how much that’s likely to matter to House Republicans.









