US
government on verge of shutdown as House votes to delay health law
Resolution
passed Sunday, makes funding government until December contingent
upon one-year delay of healthcare reforms
29
September, 2013
The
US government is on the precipice of a historic shutdown that would
result in hundreds of thousands of federal workers being placed on
unpaid leave, after House Republicans refused to pass a budget unless
it involved a delay to Barack Obama's signature healthcare reforms.
Democratic
leaders declined to convene the Senate on Sunday, standing firm
against what they described as the extortion tactics of their
Republican opponents who they accused of holding the government to
ransom for ideological reasons.
The
resolution passed by the Republican-controlled House of
Representatives in the early hours of Sunday morning makes funding
the government until the middle of December contingent upon a
one-year delay of the Affordable Care Act. It also strips the new
healthcare law, which is due to come into force on Tuesday, of a key
tax on medical devices.
Senate
Democrats and the White House have said they will block any budget
resolution that is tied to the healthcare law – known as Obamacare
– which was passed three years ago and upheld by the US supreme
court last year.
Undermining
the healthcare reforms – the flagship legislative achievement of
Obama's presidency – has been a priority for the conservative wing
of the Republican party for years and the spectre of government
shutdowns has been used in the past.
However
there was a growing sense on Capitol Hill on Sunday that House
Republicans were prepared to see through their threat of a shutdown,
which would begin at 12.01am ET on Tuesday, even though polls show
they would be blamed for a maneuver that could damage the party
during next year's midterm elections.
"Republicans
in Congress had the opportunity to pass a routine, simple continuing
resolution that keeps the government running for a few more weeks,"
said White House spokesman Jay Carney. "But instead, Republicans
decided they would rather make an ideological point by demanding the
sabotage of the healthcare law."
Harry
Reid, the Senate leader who on Saturday said he would refuse to bow
to "Tea Party anarchists", showed no interest in
negotiating with Republicans over the stalemate. He was criticised by
leading Republicans for failing to invite the Senate to debate the
House resolution, less than 36 hours from the budget deadline.
Instead,
the Senate was expected to wait until Monday before stripping the
Republican motion of its references to Obamacare and, for the second
time in a week, returning a "clean" bill to the House that
would fund federal departments, without also impeding the
introduction of mandatory healthcare for Americans who are uninsured.
If
there is time, the House would then have just a few hours to either
vote to fund the government, free of any measures that would impede
the introduction Obamacare, or trigger the first American government
shutdown in 17 years.
Asked
if he thought a shutdown was now inevitable, Richard Durbin, the
second most senior Democrat in the Senate, replied: "I'm afraid
I do."
Durbin
told CBS's Face the Nation that he was open to negotiating over the
tax on medical devices, "but not with a gun to my head, not with
the prospect of shutting down the government".
Senior
Republicans took to the Sunday morning talk shows to defend their
stance, claiming that it was Democrats who were forcing a shutdown by
refusing to compromise over the controversial healthcare reforms.
Congresswoman
Cathy McManus Rogers, chair of the House Republican conference, said
Reid was acting irresponsibly by refusing to hold a session of the
Senate. "They're the ones threatening a government shutdown by
not being here," she said.
Ted
Cruz, the Republican senator spearheading the congressional campaign
to undo Obama's healthcare reforms, turned the debate on its head by
accusing Democrats of holding "political brute force" for
refusing to delay or unravel the healthcare law.
"If
we have a shutdown, it will be because Harry Reid holds that
absolutist position and essentially holds the American people
hostage," Cruz, who this week gave a 21-hour speech to draw
attention to his campaign, said on NBC's Meet the Press.
"So
far, majority leader Harry Reid has essentially told the House of
Representatives and the American people, 'go jump in a lake',"
Cruz added. "He says: 'I'm not willing to compromise, I'm not
willing to even talk.' His position is, 100% of Obamacare must be
funded in all instances. Other than that, he's going to shut the
government down."
The
impact of any federal shutdown would depend upon how long it lasts.
Under contingency arrangements, essential services such as law
enforcement, will be kept alive, although hundreds of thousands of
federal workers would be placed on unpaid leave.
Social
security and Medicare benefits would continue, and air traffic
controllers would remain in place to ensure airports function.
However museums, national parks and landmarks such as the Statue of
Liberty and Washington Monument, would be closed.
The
military's 1.4 million personnel active duty would remain in post,
but their paychecks would be delayed. About half of the Defense
Department's civilian employees – about 800,000 people – would be
furloughed, meaning they would be suspended from work without pay.
Federal
courts would continue to function as usual for around a fortnight,
after which the judiciary would have to start shelving work that is
not considered essential.
The
gridlock over the government budget could be just the prelude to an
even more serious showdown expected in mid-October over the
government debt ceiling.
Republicans
are threatening to refuse to lift the ceiling unless Obamacare is
reigned back, which could mean the US Treasury would be forced to
default on its debt payments.
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