GOP HAS FORGOTTEN THE DISASTER OF THEIR LAST GOVERNMENT SHUTDOWN
…Washington
Post’s reporter, Paul Kane, explained how the GOP actually could force another
U.S. government shutdown.
As
expected, those voting “no” against a non-shut down bill were the GOP’s
senators: Ted Cruz, Mike Lee and Rep’s Jim Jordon & Chip Roy
Sen. Patrick Leahy (D-Vt), is the longest-serving U.S. senator, and he is the Appropriations Committee Chairman. He could only growl his frustration to reporters as a small group of congressional Republicans threatened to delay a short-term government funding patch and spark a partial federal shutdown at midnight Friday.
“I’m just worried that there are some Republicans who have forgotten the disaster the last time they shut down the government,” said Leahy, referring to the 16-day shutdown of 2013, prompted by conservative lawmakers on a ill-advised quest to block implementation of Obama’s Affordable Care Act.
Leahy’s worries were obviously not misplaced. This week’s shutdown threat, which was avoided with a Senate vote, was aimed at forcing President Biden to sign a bill blocking his own coronavirus vaccine mandates. But it also is led by some of the same Republican plotters.
Yes, the Senate has passed a stopgap spending
bill in a 69-to-28 vote to avoid a shutdown and fund the government until
February 2022. The Republicans voting no, included Sen. Ted Cruz (Tex.), the lead architect of the 2013 shutdown, and
Sen. Mike Lee (Utah), as well as Reps. Jim Jordan (Ohio) and Chip Roy (Tex.),
who served as Cruz’s top legislative strategist in 2013. “We should use every tool we have to
protect people’s rights,” Cruz thundered to reporters Wednesday. “The
vaccine mandates are illegal, they’re abusive and they’re hurting this
country.” FYI: They are NOT illegal.
(The federal appeals court, full of Republican appointees, has halted the Biden administration’s vaccine requirements which has delivered the policy a major blow.)
This week’s Senate gridlock amounted to more than simply getting the old band back together for one more gig. After a 10-month flurry of legislating, it heralded a potentially radical new era of governing for Biden and other Democratic leaders. They must now deal not only with an emboldened GOP leadership that sees House and Senate majorities well within their future grasp. However, a group of conservatives, are eager to hijack the basic processes of government, if only to make a point.
(The Washington Post’s, Paul Kane, seen above, later explained how a group of Republicans objected to the federal vaccine requirements that could potentially force another government shutdown.)
Freshman Sen. Roger Marshall (R-Kan.), who led the effort against the bill with Cruz, acknowledged that any shutdown would be merely symbolic, “a temporary thing” that would end once the Senate plods through some weekend procedural votes. “But, you know what, I hear from Kansans. They want to know, are Republicans fighting for them? Where’s the fight?” he said. “And I’ll be doggone if I’m going to get rolled on this right now without a fight.”
That attitude was also on display this week as the annual defense policy bill became snagged on the Senate floor over an amendment dispute, with several Republicans demanding votes on their own favored items.
But all but one, GOP Senator, Marco Rubio
(Fla.), who is seeking to attach a bill cracking down on Chinese forced labor,
had not been satisfied. Fortunately, one
holdout was enough to delay further action.
“What they want is a vote that lets them say I voted for it, but it never becomes law. That ain’t going to work with me,” he said.
House Republicans have made opposing anything Democrats do a litmus test for loyalty to the Republican party. This means Democrats and their slim majority will likely have to do all the legislative lifting themselves regardless of the issue for the remainder of this Congress. Only one Republican, Rep. Adam Kinzinger (Ill.), voted to keep the government open even though the stopgap funding resolution kept in place the funding levels enacted under President Donald Trump.
As expected, “Shut it down,” said the radical Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga). She is a Trump ally that implored her colleagues from the House floor.
(This kind of move by Greene has allowed a large MAGA squad of Trump supporters to have influence in growing political purity among other Republicans.)
Meanwhile, action to increase the debt ceiling past Dec. 15 remains in doubt, with key Republicans. This includes Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) who continues to insist that they will not consent in any way to an increase in the debt ceiling. (FYI: The United States has NEVER faulted on increasing the nation’s debt ceiling.)
That could force Senate Democrats to engage in a convoluted legislative process in the coming weeks to avoid a federal default that would rattle today’s fragile U.S. economy.
But the politics could get even more cutthroat: Trump has publicly urged McConnell and other Republicans to use the debt ceiling as leverage in an exceedingly unlikely bid to force Democrats to abandon their nearly $2 trillion domestic policy bill known as Build Back Better.
“Use the Debt Ceiling, Mitch, show strength and courage,” Trump said in a Tuesday statement. “Our Country is being destroyed.”
The basic obligations of government have been complicated business on Capitol Hill for more than a decade, since Republicans swept into the House majority in 2011 under President Barack Obama, and proceeded to use appropriations deadlines and the federal debt limit as leverage to highlight conservative policy goals.
Democrats played with those tactics themselves in 2018, forcing a brief shutdown over immigration policy, and then fully embraced them after winning back the House majority They held firm against Trump’s demand for a nearly $6 billion border wall in a clash that ultimately forced Republicans to back down after a record 35-day federal shutdown.
But Democrats also cut deals with Trump to
increase federal spending, raise the debt limit, and otherwise keep the wheels
of government turning even as they moved to block his many controversial
policies.
And when Biden took office in January, with a razor-thin Democratic Senate majority to match, there were some early indications that smoother sailing was possible. Democrats quickly pushed through a $2 trillion stimulus bill, the American Rescue Plan, and Biden was able to clinch a bipartisan infrastructure accord while the rest of his agenda proceeded on a separate, partisan track.
The Senate, meanwhile, advanced hundreds of billions of dollars in additional federal industrial investment aiming at blunting China’s rise as a world power. That bill is expected to be merged with House efforts and passed early next year.
But this week’s actions demonstrated to some Democrats that the good times are unlikely to roll on, especially going into the midterm elections. This is because of dismal approval ratings for Biden, the new redistricting advantages and encouraging off-year election results that have Republicans expecting major gains.
On deck is not only final passage of the expansive Build Back Better bill and a debt-ceiling increase, but also passing full appropriations legislation for fiscal 2022. The stopgap that was passed punts the shutdown deadline into mid-February, but there is little sign that Democrats and Republicans are close to an accord on new levels of federal spending. Absent an agreement, spending levels agreed to under President Trump could remain in place indefinitely.
The passage of the infrastructure and China bills “genuinely encouraged many of us who know that we need to prove that democracy can work,” said Sen. Christopher Coons (D-Del.). “But it looks like we may now be sliding back into what I’ll call shutdown politics.”
Coons, who came to Congress in 2011 alongside the new GOP House majority, said those years of split government, with congressional Republicans constantly feuding with then-president Barack Obama, were “enormously frustrating, but still far more productive than we are today… many more amendment votes, many more bills moving through.”
The gridlock has extended to Biden’s personnel. While Democrats blocked consideration of a broad swath of Trump’s nominees, key Republicans have expanded their opposition to some of Biden’s diplomatic and national security nominees. Recently, senators took their first floor vote on a U.S. attorney nominee in 28 years due to GOP opposition.
These aggressive tactics are in-line with a
push among Democrats to reassess the Senate’s rules and at least consider
modifications to the filibuster, and the 60-vote supermajority requirement for
most legislation. That rule has been modified by both parties over the course
of several decades, and the threats on display prompted some Democrats to
discuss further changes.
“If this fundamental institution where we work our sort of exercise in self-government can’t get the basic things done, like keeping the lights on, we’re going to have a really hard time competing with China,” said Sen. Michael Bennet (D-Colo.). “That may require changing the way the Senate operates.”
Among the ranks of the exasperated is Senate Majority Leader Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.), who vented after Rubio blocked a bipartisan deal on the defense bill that would have incorporated dozens of amendments into the legislation and set up votes on about two dozen more. “It is regrettable. It is sad. It undoes the work of so many senators on both sides of the aisle,” Schumer said. “And it speaks to the need to restore the Senate and change these rules.”
Unfortunately, with Biden’s current low approval ratings, with Trump’s and the GOP’s anti-democratic efforts, plus the mid-term elections in 2022, the chance of the Republicans taking over the House and even the Senate is causing the GOP to feel very strong for the near future.
It will take almost a miracle for the current movement to reverse in support for the Democratic Party. However, we can all hope that Biden’s Build Back Better bill will allow people to see the positive effects that it will have on every Americans lives.
Copyright G. Ater 2021
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