Utah Sen. Mike Lee told a group of constituents at a town hall meeting Thursday that his plan with Texas Sen. Ted Cruz to defund the Affordable Care Act (ACA) in the upcoming short-term Congressional budget (which would force the senate and president to veto the budget, shutting down the government) is not meant to lead to a government shutdown.
But, Lee is speaking out of both sides of his mouth, what he now says won’t happen is a plan that has been endorsed by other Republicans—and by Lee himself.
Last month, Lee, Senator Ted Cruz and Florida Sen. Marco Rubio suggested that Republicans force a decision between the ACA and the functioning government that passed it.
Independently, Lee wrote earlier this month that the House should add language to the next spending bill (a “continuing resolution”) to fund all functions of government except the ACA so that senate Democrats would “have a choice: fund the government or shut it down to protect Obamacare.”
Yet oddly enough, Lee said Thursday “the whole reason I am bringing this forward is to avoid a shutdown.” Yes America. Mike Lee and the GOP have introduced a potential shutdown with the specific intention of avoiding one. The only government shutdown Lee wants to “avoid” is the one his suggestion would create.
And that’s just it: Lee doesn’t want to avoid a government shutdown. He wants to avoid a government shutdown at the cost of the ACA. Regardless of how he describes it, Lee has prioritized potentially defunding the ACA over continuing government services.








