Category: GOP Shutdown (Page 3 of 5)

GOPosaur Down

The first federal government shutdown in 17 years, triggered by a Republican demand to defund the Affordable Care Act on Oct. 1, cost the U.S. $24 billion in potential economic activity — equalling at least 0.6% of projected annualized fourth-quarter 2013 GDP growth, according to ratings agency Standard & Poor’s.

The government will reopen tomorrow and the debt ceiling will not be hit, thanks to House Democrats who voted tonight to pass the deal brokered by Senators Harry Reid and Mitch McConnell. A deal completed thanks to Democrats who refused to blink.

GOPosaur Down

Thank you President Obama, Harry Reid and Nancy Pelosi.

Religious Leaders and Workers Sing and Pray For Moderate Republicans

A tip-of-the-hat to Jean K. for recommending this story to us

Like most Americans, Sister Simone Campbell is feeling desperate about the current stand-off and shut down of the government. So Sister Simone along with an interfaith group of religious leaders decided to do something about it. Over 70 prominent religious leaders joined with locked-out federal workers in a pilgrimage on Capitol Hill this morning; an action organized by Faith In Public Life together with other religious groups.



As religious leaders stopped to pray at the office of U.S. Representative Frank Wolf (R-VA), the congressman released a statement titled, “Show Humility and Start Governing,” that the congressman delivered earlier on the House floor. The statement affirms that “The Congress and the president have been entrusted with much, namely the responsibility to govern this country. The American people rightly expect us, regardless of party affiliation, to come together, especially during times of crisis, and find ways to get things done. They are understandably fed up with this current dysfunction, and I am, too.” The congressman’s spokesperson noted that Rep. Wolf would support a clean and unconditional continuing resolution to open the government and to raise the debt ceiling without preconditions.

“As a Virginian, I am proud of Congressman Wolf’s bold leadership to call upon his colleagues to show humility and start governing. He is an example of what we need more of in this current Congress,” said Douglas Grace, director of Ecumenical Advocacy Days and a participant in today’s faith leader pilgrimage.

An extreme faction of Congress is recklessly playing politics with the lives of countless Americans: seniors seeing “Meals on Wheels” cut, pregnant women and infants losing vital nutrition support, workers locked out of their jobs as bills pile up, veterans facing benefit cuts, and communities put in peril by the suspension of crucial environmental protection efforts.

“It’s time for irresponsible factions in Congress to stop this reckless behavior and end this shutdown immediately,” said Sr. Simone Campbell, Executive Director of NETWORK, A Catholic Social Justice Lobby . “There is no moral justification for holding struggling families, pregnant women and seniors hostage.”

Eric Cantor Blamed By Virginia Colleagues For Prolonging Government Shutdown

Cantor

by Jennifer Bendery

WASHINGTON — Two Virginia congressmen fumed Tuesday about the damage being done to their state by the ongoing government shutdown and laid the blame squarely on a fellow Virginian, House Majority Leader Eric Cantor (R), for preventing lawmakers from voting on a bill to immediately end it.

During a press conference, Democratic Reps. Gerry Connolly and Jim Moran said the shutdown has hurt Virginia more than any other state. They pointed out that more than 185,000 Virginia residents are federal employees and federal spending represents about one-third of the state’s entire economy. In addition, Virginia is home to a large number of veterans who are now experiencing delays in receiving their benefits.

It’s been more than two weeks since the Senate passed a “clean” funding bill to open the government, with no strings attached. Typically, any House member could call up that bill and request a vote. But on Sept. 30, on the eve of the shutdown, Republicans quietly changed the House rules so only one person can bring that bill up: Cantor.

Moran said the rules change was “unprecedented” and has left Virginians, along with every one else, at the hands of Cantor to end the shutdown, even though he refuses to do so. The Senate-passed bill already has the votes to pass in the House and would be signed into law by the president, if it were allowed to get a vote.

“Hardest-hit state in the nation,” Moran said. “Yet the one person holding this up is the person who represents the state capital, who is the majority leader of the House.”

“Let’s just say it: The Republicans are the problem.”

By Bill Moyers, Moyers & Company

Even if the threat of terrorists went away, none of those bold projects Glenn Greenwald described as defining American greatness would happen today. Our government is paralyzed and dysfunctional, and it’s getting worse than ever. Just ask Norman Ornstein and Thomas Mann, as I’m about to do.

For decades, these two political scientists were on the go-to list for Beltway pundits and reporters seeking wisdom on the curious ways of governance. But then, almost exactly a year ago to this day, they published an op-ed piece in The Washington Post headlined, “Let’s just say it: The Republicans are the problem.” Mann and Ornstein argued that democracy and the economy are in a crash dive, and that congressional gridlock was largely the fault of the Republican Party and its takeover by right wing radicals. What’s more, they said, the mainstream media was adding to the problem by resorting to “false equivalency,” pretending that both parties were equally at fault.

Elizabeth Warren Explains the Debt Limit

by @alexandergmoore

The United States is the only democracy in the world where the legislature debates whether it should pay the bills it has already incurred.

Like the Affordable Care Act, the looming issue of the debt limit is pretty confusing. Though it soaks up headlines everywhere, it’s rare to find any reporting that makes clear sense of it. The debt limit increase is often described as in increase in “borrowing power,” as if we were applying for an increase on a national credit card. But that’s not how it works. It’s more like authorizing a credit card payment for purchases we already made in last month’s bill.

Thankfully Elizabeth Warren is here to clear things up and to explain why, in simple terms, the idea of Congress just deciding to default on that debt is completely insane. Watch the Senator’s Thursday speech on Capitol Hill below, and be ye learned.

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