US
begins government shutdown as budget deadline passes
The
US government has begun a partial shutdown of many government
services after the Republican-led House of Representatives refused to
approve a budget for next year.
1
October, 2013
The
midnight deadline for an agreement passed despite an 11th hour appeal
by President Barack Obama.
Because
no agreement was reached the government will close all non-essential
federal services.
The
partial shutdown is the first in the US in 17 years.
More
than 700,000 federal government workers face being sent home on
unpaid leave, with no guarantee of back pay once the deadlock is
over.
Budget
bills have gone back and forth between the Republican controlled
House and the Democratic controlled Senate.
The
BBC reports one of the key points of contention in the stalemate has
been the healthcare law, known as Obamacare.
Republicans
in the House of Representatives demand that the law be repealed or
stripped of funding as a condition for continuing to fund the
government.
Major
portions of the law, which passed in 2010 and has been validated by
the Supreme Court, are due to take effect on Tuesday.
Meanwhile,
a deadline of 17 October for extending the federal government's
borrowing limit looms even larger.
Earlier
this month, Treasury Secretary Jack Lew said that unless the United
States is allowed to extend its borrowing limit, the federal
government would be left with about $US30 billion to meet its
commitments.
Washington
faced a similar impasse over the debt ceiling in 2011, but a
compromise was reached
US
government begins shutdown after Congress debates end in stalemate
Recriminations
fly as Republican rancour over Obamacare leads to first federal
shutdown in two decades
1
October, 2013
The
US government was forced to begin closing swathes of non-essential
services on Tuesday morning after frantic rounds of late night
political sparring failed to avert the first federal shutdown in
nearly two decades.
As
a midnight deadline to extend Congressional spending authority ticked
ever closer, Republicans staged a series of last-ditch efforts to use
a once-routine budget procedure to force Democrats to abandon their
efforts to extend US health insurance.
Three
separate attacks on the Affordable Care Act, known as Obamacare, were
staged by the House of Representatives, only to be rejected in turn
by the Democrat-controlled Senate, which accused Republicans of
holding the country to ransom.
Shortly
before midnight, Senate majority leader Harry Reid marked the end of
the process by rejecting House calls for formal talks to reconcile
their conflicting positions, arguing it was impossible to negotiate
with a “gun to our heads”.
“This
is a very serious time in the history of our country,” Reid said.
“Millions of people are going to be affected tomorrow and the
Republicans are still playing games”
An
estimated 800,000 federal workers will be forced to stay at home from
Tuesday under a stalemate that could drag on for days and disrupt
services as varied as national parks and the US space programme.
The
White House has drawn up a list of essential staff who are legally
allowed to carry on working, but President Barack Obama warned that a
shutdown would have an immediate affect on the fragile US economy.
“We
do not have a clear indication that Congress will act in time for the
president to sign a Continuing Resolution before the end of the day
tomorrow, October 1,” said a White House statement issued shortly
before midnight.
“Therefore,
agencies should now execute plans for an orderly shutdown due to the
absence of appropriations. We urge Congress to act quickly to pass a
Continuing Resolution to provide a short-term bridge that ensures
sufficient time to pass a budget for the remainder of the fiscal
year, and to restore the operation of critical public services and
programs that will be impacted by a lapse in appropriations.”
Obama
also issued a statement to military employees after signing a
Republican-proposed law that exempts active-duty servicemen from the
effects of the shutdown, but will not protect civilian workers.
“I
know the days ahead could mean more uncertainty, including possible
furloughs,” Obama said. “You and your families deserve better
than the dysfunction we’re seeing in Congress.”
House
speaker John Boehner denied that Republican tactics were responsible
for the shutdown, insisting Democrats were to blame for refusing to
negotiate over Obamacare.
“I
didn't come here to shut down the government,” Boehner told one of
several heated House debates.
“I
came here to fight for a smaller, less costly and more accountable
federal government. But here we find ourselves in this moment dealing
with a law that’s causing unknown consequences and unknown damage
to the American people and to our economy. And that issue is
Obamacare.”
But
Democrats are confident that US public opinion will continue to hold
Republicans to blame for what could be days of disruption until a
deal can be struck.
They
argue that Republicans are using underhand methods to overturn a law
that was passed four years ago, ratified by the supreme court and
endorsed by voters at the last presidential election.
Senator
Bernie Sanders, of Vermont, said: “If we surrender to
hostage-taking tonight, these guys would be back within a couple of
weeks without a shadow of a doubt. What we are dealing with tonight
is an extraordinary anti-democratic act.”
US
government shutdown: LIVE UPDATES
1
October, 2013
Tuesday,
October 1
GMT
04:05:
Majority Leader Harry Reid has announced a Senate recess until 13:30
GMT Tuesday.
GMT
04:00:
The House and Senate could not come to a deal to fund federal
agencies ahead of the 04:00 GMT deadline, effectively beginning the
first shutdown of the US government in 17 years.
The Office of
Management and Budget has ordered
federal agencies to "now
execute plans for an orderly shutdown due to the absence of
appropriations.”
GMT
03:45:
House minority leader Nancy Pelosi addressed reporters at a press
conference, calling the inability to pass a continuing resolution to
fund government the “Tea
Party government shutdown.”
"I'd
like to say good evening,"
said Pelosi, "but
it isn't a very good one."
Earlier on Monday Rep. Pelosi had offered a “compromise”
with Republican Speaker John Boehner to secure the needed Democrat
votes to pass a bill that set spending at sequestration levels, a
proposition opposed by many in her caucus, including Minority Whip
Steny Hoyer (D-Md.).
GMT
03:03:
Senator Reid called a Republican House plan to call for a conference
“subterfuge”
and refused such a motion until the GOP presented a “clean”
continuing resolution, meaning a bill to fund government without any
modifications calling for changes to Obamacare.
According to
The Hill, a conference committee would allow “members
of both chambers to meet face to face to decide how to move forward
on a spending bill, instead of the ‘ping-pong’ back and forth
that has taken several days and yielded nothing.”
GMT
02:49:
Senior Republican John McCain indicated that House Republicans should
present a clean bill to continue funding government, telling
reporters that "Republicans
will be perceived as blocking and as shutting down the government."
"We
can't win,"
McCain said to press ahead of a likely government shutdown. A clean
continuing resolution to fund government "will
happen sooner or later"
added McCain.
GMT
02:40:
The Washington Post reports House Republicans will not attempt to
pass any more bills to fund federal agencies ahead of the 04:00 GMT
deadline, marking the first government shutdown since 1996.
GMT
02:20:
President Obama signed legislation on Monday evening to ensure that
military personnel would continue to receive pay during a government
shutdown.
GMT
02:05:
The House was thought to be working on a fourth CR to present to the
Senate prior to the midnight shutdown deadline.
GMT
01:41:
The US Senate has voted down the House Continuing Resolution that
proposed to keep the government open while delaying the Affordable
Care Act’s individual mandate implementation, along with
eliminating health insurance subsidies for Congress members and their
members of staff.
The
House passed the CR earlier Monday evening by a vote of 228-201
demanding a one-year delay in the health care law’s mandate that
individuals buy health insurance. The Senate rejected that House
motion by 54-46 votes
The
continuing resolution -- defeated just hours before
the midnight deadline to pass a short-term budget bill -- also denied
the law’s federal subsidies to members of Congress, Capitol Hill
staff, executive branch appointees, White House staff, the president
and the vice president, who have to enter the law’s insurance
exchanges instead.
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