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Defiant House delays Obamacare; government shutdown looms
updated 4:16 AM EDT, Sun September 29, 2013
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
- The House passes a spending plan with two anti-Obamacare amendments
- The House also pushed through a bill to guarantee military pay if shutdown happens
- The Senate does not plan to meet Sunday, leaving only Monday to avert a shutdown
- The White House says President Barack Obama would veto the amended House plan
The temporary budget
resolution now goes back to the Senate, where Democrats have
consistently said any changes to President Barack Obama's signature
healthcare law is a deal-killer.
On top of that, Obama has already issued a veto threat.
If Washington can't reach a deal, a government shutdown will begin at 12:01 a.m. Tuesday.
"The Republicans' first
try was to defund Obamacare. Now they are slowly chipping away at it,"
said Dana Bash, CNN's chief congressional correspondent. "They want the
president to negotiate. That is their line: the president needs to come
to the table and negotiate."
A Senate Democratic
source told CNN there were no plans for the Senate to meet before Monday
-- the day the current fiscal year ends.
Congress could avert a
shutdown by passing a temporary spending measure while the two chambers
work out their differences. But neither side is talking about that now.
"I've not talked to
anybody here who doesn't think it's a very, very big possibility, even
Republicans, that the government won't shut down -- even for a short
time," Bash said.
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The decision to vote on
the House amendments overnight emerged from a rare weekend GOP caucus
meeting called by House Speaker John Boehner. The votes, taken after
midnight, were 231-192 for the Obamacare delay, and 248-174 for the
medical device tax repeal, mostly along party lines.
Two Democrats broke rank and voted for the Obamacare delay: Mike McIntyre of North Carolina, and Jim Matheson of Iowa.
Seventeen Democrats voted for the tax repeal.
Meanwhile, a bill to guarantee pay for military personnel during any shutdown passed 423-0.
House Republicans had
said they wanted to stop as much of the president's health law as
possible. The medical device tax is one of the more controversial taxes
in the law, with Republicans saying it sends jobs overseas.
Democrats, particularly those from states or districts with medical device manufacturers, have spoken out against the tax.
"Republicans have
pointed out over and over the entire day that many Democrats in the
Senate are already on record voting for this repeal," Bash said. "So
that's why they're trying to put Democrats there in a box."
"But we're already being
told by Democratic sources in the Senate that they feel they're going
to keep all of their Senators in line," she said.
Senate Majority Leader
Harry Reid called the Republican strategy "pointless" and said the
Democratic-led Senate would reject the GOP alternatives. The White House
said Obama would veto the House proposal if it reached his desk.
A separate White House statement said voting for the GOP measure "is voting for a shutdown."
Partisan back and forth
The back and forth over
the spending plan -- called a continuing resolution in legislative
jargon -- began when House Republicans stripped all funding for Obamacare from their original version and sent it to the Senate.
The Senate, where Democrats hold a slim majority, restored the funding on Friday and kicked the plan back to the House.
On Saturday, Boehner convened his caucus to forge a counteroffer to the Senate changes.
House Republicans added
an amendment that would fund the government until December, a month
longer than the Senate version. They also added a "conscience clause" to
the one-year delay amendment to allow employers and insurance plans to
refuse to cover birth control.
Keeping military pay
In a sign that the House
Republicans don't expect the Senate to accept their changes, House
leaders held a separate vote to ensure that the military gets paid in
the event of a government shutdown.
Officials estimate the
military pay could be affected by a shutdown as soon as October 14, and
the GOP move was considered a political gesture to shield the party from
criticism that its brinksmanship could hurt U.S. fighting forces.
But on the spending plan, Reid said the Republican tactics amounted to what he described as extortion by "tea party anarchists."
"To be absolutely clear,
the Senate will reject both the one-year delay of the Affordable Care
Act and the repeal of the medical device tax," Reid said in a statement.
"After weeks of futile political games from Republicans, we are still
at square one."
White House spokesman
Jay Carney added that Obama would not negotiate on Obamacare or spending
issues "under threats of a government shutdown that will hurt our
economy."
Shutdown looms
Reid previously warned
that any changes to the Senate's version by the House would result in at
least the start of a government shutdown because of the time it would
take to reconsider the proposal.
Republican Rep. Michael
Grimm of New York said Saturday a "slight" shutdown could occur due to
the little time left to pass a short-term spending plan for the new
fiscal year that starts Tuesday.
"I'm hoping no, but just
look at the timing," Grimm said, laying out a scenario in which the
political wrangling leads to last-minute deliberations on Monday and
beyond.
The prospect of a
government shutdown caused by GOP tactics irked the longest serving
member of Congress in history, Democratic Rep. John Dingell of Michigan,
who said in a statement that "this once-deliberative body has been
taken over by knaves and know-nothings, content with putting partisan
politics ahead of the American people."
Obama not backing down
Tea party conservatives
want to halt Obamacare now, just as full implementation of its
individual health care exchanges begins in the new fiscal year starting
Tuesday.
More moderate
Republicans, such as veteran Sens. John McCain of Arizona and John
Cornyn of Texas, criticize the strategy of tying a government shutdown
to undermining the health care reform law passed by Democrats in 2010
and upheld by the Supreme Court last year.
Obama said Friday that
new exchanges for private health insurance under the reforms will open
this week as scheduled -- even if there is a government shutdown.
"The House Republicans
are so concerned with appeasing the tea party that they have threatened a
government shutdown or worse unless I gut or repeal the Affordable Care
Act," Obama said. "That's not going to happen."
Political fallout
Even if the government
were to shut down, Obamacare would probably continue anyway. That's
because most of the funding for Obamacare comes from new taxes and fees
as well as from cost cuts to other programs like Medicare and other
types of funding that carry on even in the event of a government
shutdown.
Congress' research arm,
the Congressional Research service, prepared a memo for Republican Sen.
Tom Coburn, R-Oklahoma, that suggested an effort to use the government
shutdown as leverage to force Democrats to delay implementing the law
would not really work because the law will continue regardless of a
shutdown.
Plus, the law would
still be in effect, so its many new requirements -- everything from
forcing insurance companies to cover anyone who wants insurance to
requiring Americans to carry health insurance or pay a fine -- would
still be in effect, too.
Republican leaders in both chambers don't want a shutdown now over the spending issue, for political and negotiating reasons.
They fear the optics of
Republicans being blamed for a shutdown, and also want to exert as much
leverage as possible for the GOP's agenda at the upcoming deadline to
raise the federal debt limit.
The debt ceiling
The shutdown showdown
comes a few weeks before another fiscal deadline -- the need to raise
the nation's debt ceiling so the government can pay all its bills.
Treasury Secretary Jack
Lew said last week the limit on how much the government can borrow must
be increased by October 17 or the nation could be technically in
default.
Analysts warn of severe
economic impact from any doubt cast over whether the U.S. would fail to
meet its debt obligations. A similar bout of congressional brinksmanship
over the debt ceiling in 2011 led to the first-ever downgrade of the
U.S. credit rating.
Boehner faces the same
rift in his caucus over the debt ceiling issue, with tea party
conservatives pushing to undermine Obamacare and fulfill other
Republican priorities in return for what Obama calls the responsibility
of Congress to make sure America can pay its bills.
On Thursday, Boehner had
to delay introducing a GOP debt ceiling plan after conservatives
complained the proposed package failed to include enough budget cuts and
significant changes to entitlement programs.
The initial proposal by
House GOP leaders, which would raise the debt ceiling for a year,
included a one-year delay of Obamacare, provisions to roll back
regulations on businesses, tax reforms and approval of the Keystone XL
oil pipeline.
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