As shutdown deadline nears, ping pong on funding continues

Government shutdown looms
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
- NEW: House Republicans defy repeated rejections by the Democratic-led Senate
- NEW: A government shutdown could be just hours away
- Conservatives seek undermine Obamacare before its private exchanges take effect Tuesday
- In a new poll, Americans spread the blame and say Congress acts like "spoiled children"
Defying repeated
rejections by the Democratic-led Senate, House Republicans late Monday
again attempted to derail Obamacare by amending a spending plan that
would avert a shutdown. The measure would delay the individual mandate
in the health care law and eliminate health premium subsidies for
members of Congress, their staff and the president.
"All the Senate has to do is say yes, and the government's funded tomorrow," Speaker John Boehner said shortly before the vote.
In the latest volley of
legislative ping pong over a short-term spending plan needed to avoid
the shutdown at midnight, the Senate is expected to reject the changes
and send the issue back to the House -- again.
Earlier, Senate Democrats rejected a House proposal by a 54-46 vote on strict party lines.
President Barack Obama
made a previously unscheduled statement to reporters on Monday afternoon
that repeated his criticism of the attempts by House Republicans to
undermine Obamacare that he said threaten to harm the economy with a
shutdown.
"You don't get to extract
a ransom for doing your job, for doing what you're supposed to be doing
anyway, where just because there's a law there that you don't like,"
the president said.
Obama later called
Boehner and other party leaders in the House and Senate, the White House
said, but a Boehner spokesman indicated there was no breakthrough.
Moderate GOP revolt against Boehner?
Meanwhile, GOP sources
told CNN that moderate House Republicans were trying to galvanize what
would amount to a rebellion against Boehner and their tea party
colleagues by defeating the latest proposed spending plan with attached
anti-Obamacare provisions.
However, a procedural vote on the measure passed with only six Republicans voting "no."
Without congressional
approval of new spending legislation, parts of the federal government
will begin shutting down when the current fiscal year ends at midnight,
forcing agencies to furlough thousands of workers and curtail some
services until there is a resolution.
"I feel sad about it. We
expect more from our Congress," said Vick Temple, a worker for the
Federal Aviation Administration who told CNN he faced being furloughed
in a shutdown.
Polls show public
opposition to a shutdown, and stocks ended lower Monday on Wall Street
due to concerns over the economic impact.
Meanwhile, the two parties persisted in blaming the other side as the shutdown deadline neared.




Republican Rep. Renee
Ellmers of North Carolina said on CNN's "New Day" that her party
continues to be deeply concerned about Tuesday's scheduled opening of
Obamacare health insurance exchanges and "keeping the checkbook out of
Barack Obama's hands and the damage can be done there."
Rep. Debbie Wasserman
Shultz, D-Florida, appearing alongside Ellmers, characterized the
Republican strategy of tying overall government operations to at least a
delay in health care changes as "irrational."
"It jeopardizes the economy and it makes no sense," she said.
On Monday morning, Obama
told reporters he wasn't resigned to a shutdown, but he signaled its
likelihood even as he indicated possible talks with congressional
leaders.
"I suspect that I will
be speaking to the leaders today, tomorrow and the next day," Obama said
at a joint appearance with visiting Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu, who acknowledged the Washington brouhaha by thanking the
president for meeting with him "on what I know is a very busy day for
you."
The latest plan rejected by Senate Democrats would have delayed Obamacare for a year and repealed a tax on medical devices.
Legislative ping pong
Last week, the Senate
voted down a House GOP plan to eliminate funding for Obamacare in a
short-term spending plan to keep the government running in the new
fiscal year that begins Tuesday.
Democrats have pressured
Boehner to give up a losing fight over Obamacare forced by tea party
conservatives and instead hold a vote on a "clean" spending plan that
includes no provisions seeking to undermine the health care reforms.
On CNN, Wasserman
Schultz predicted that such a measure would pass easily with support
from all Democrats and more moderate Republicans.
Some Republicans
expressed frustration Monday with the tactics of their congressional
colleagues. Veteran GOP Sen. John McCain of Arizona noted that any
attempt to repeal Obamacare would fail because of Obama's veto, which
would require a two-thirds majority in the Senate to overcome.
"There's not 67 votes in
the United States Senate, therefore, ergo, we're not going to repeal
Obamacare," McCain said. "OK? That's it. We may do this for a day. We
may do it for a week. We may do it for a month. It's going to end up the
same way. "
GOP Rep. Charlie Dent of
Pennsylvania told CNN Chief Congressional Correspondent Dana Bash that
whichever party was to blame, a shutdown will make everyone look bad.
"At this point, the
hourglass is nearly empty," Dent said. "Now that we've sent over two
volleys to the U.S. Senate and they rejected both."
Trying again would only
yield the same result, he continued, adding that "sooner or later, we
have to pass a clean resolution to fund the government before the end of
the day."
"I believe the votes are there to do it," Dent said.
Obamacare a GOP focus
Obama and Democrats
reject what they call Republican efforts to use the threat of a
government shutdown to force negotiations on the president's signature
health care reforms.
Noting that the 2010
Affordable Care Act has been upheld by the Supreme Court, they say it is
settled law that voters endorsed last year by re-electing Obama over
GOP candidate Mitt Romney, who campaigned on repealing it.
A new CNN/ORC poll shows
that Americans are not happy about the prospect of a shutdown, which is
happening because Congress has been unable to pass a budget for the new
fiscal year that begins Tuesday.
According to the poll,
68% of Americans think shutting down the government for even a few days
is a bad idea, while 27% think it's a good idea.
And it appears most
Americans would blame congressional Republicans for a shutdown:
Sixty-nine percent said they agreed with the statement that the party's
elected officials were acting like "spoiled children."
Democrats, however, weren't far behind: Fifty-eight percent of respondents said they too were acting like spoiled kids.
A poll later showed public support for Congress at record low levels.
Stock traders also
seemed solidly against a shutdown. The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell
by more than 120 points, or nearly 1 percent, and the other two major
indexes also closed lower.
Among major economic
issues that could result from a shutdown: delays in processing FHA
housing loan applications -- a potential drag on the housing recovery --
and the potential loss of government spending that's helping prop up
the economy, said Christine Romans, host of CNN's "Your Money."
"You've got an economy
right now that's very tied to government spending and government
contracts, so that could have a ripple effect all across Main Street,"
she said on CNN's "New Day."
If the government does
shut down, it would be the first time it has happened in more than 17
years. That previous shutdown, sparked by a budget battle between
Democratic President Bill Clinton and a Republican Congress, lasted for
21 days.
While the military will
remain on duty, as will many essential public safety, health and welfare
operations, many government offices will close. About a quarter of the
federal government's 3.3 million employees -- those frequently referred
to as "nonessential" -- will be told to stay home from work until the
shutdown is over.
Attorney General Eric
Holder and Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel said essential crime prevention
and military services would continue, but some workers would be
furloughed. Holder said he would cut his pay by the same amount as the
most severely affected Justice Department employees because "we are all
in this together."
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